Compare Aaero prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Mad Fellows. Published by Wired Productions. Released on 4/11/2017. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action, Indie.

Put on headphones, plug in a controller, and let 15 tracks of Noisia, Flux Pavilion, and Neosignal turn your nervous system into a percussion instrument. This two-person studio punched well above its weight.

My first instinct when I loaded Aaero was to treat it gently, the way you might treat any small indie from a studio of two people. That instinct lasted about forty seconds, right up until Flux Pavilion's Bass Cannon kicked in and the game started demanding things from both of my thumbs simultaneously. Gentle is not what Mad Fellows had in mind. The core loop is elegantly split in two. With your left stick you chase ribbons of light that snake and curl through tunnel-like alien environments, each ribbon visualising a layer of whatever track is playing beneath you. Follow them cleanly and the music blooms fuller; miss them and it strips back, which is its own quiet punishment. The right stick handles a target-lock shooting system against mechanical enemies and screen-filling bosses, and here is the part the tutorial glosses over: attacks land on the first or third beats of a 4/4 bar, and the game rewards you for timing them precisely. Once that clicks, the shooting stops feeling like an interruption and starts feeling like a second instrument. The two halves pull against each other in a way that is genuinely inventive, even if late-game barriers and homing projectiles occasionally feel like they are breaking the rhythm rather than riding it. The 15-track licensed setlist is the spiritual centre of the whole thing. Noisia, Neosignal, Katy B, The Prototypes, Habstrakt, Muzzy. It reads like a carefully curated festival lineup for a very specific corner of electronic music, and every level has been built around its assigned track rather than just placed on top of one. The low-poly, neon-on-black visual design is built to complement bass-heavy music specifically: flat bold shapes that pulse with the drop rather than compete with it. Headphones are not optional. Three difficulty tiers sit on top of the base experience. Normal is the on-ramp; Advanced requires a 90% completion rate to unlock; Master allows a single life and demands near-perfection. The Chill Out mode, accessible from the start, lets you absorb any level without a score or death screen, which is the right design call for a game this sonically rich. The honest reservations are real, though. Fifteen songs is not a large library, and players who master the upper difficulties may find the content exhausted faster than they would like. The difficulty steps between Advanced and Master modes feel thin. And the tutorial's silence on the beat-timing mechanic for shooting has been frustrating players since launch, not enough to derail a run, but enough to make your first few attempts feel inconsistent in a way that seems like the game's fault before you realise it is yours. If EDM and dubstep are genuinely not your genres, your mileage will vary in ways that no amount of tight controls can fully compensate for. But if any of those fifteen names made you lean in, this is exactly as good as you are hoping. Kai, Scout Team

Aaero

Aaero

Apr 11, 2017Mad FellowsWired Productions
GamerScout Says

Put on headphones, plug in a controller, and let 15 tracks of Noisia, Flux Pavilion, and Neosignal turn your nervous system into a percussion instrument. This two-person studio punched well above its weight.

PCXbox
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Platinum
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €0.26

GamerScout Verdict

Best for EDM fans and score-chasers who want a tight, focused rhythm-shooter from a two-person studio that knew exactly what it was making.

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About Aaero

My first instinct when I loaded Aaero was to treat it gently, the way you might treat any small indie from a studio of two people. That instinct lasted about forty seconds, right up until Flux Pavilion's Bass Cannon kicked in and the game started demanding things from both of my thumbs simultaneously. Gentle is not what Mad Fellows had in mind. The core loop is elegantly split in two. With your left stick you chase ribbons of light that snake and curl through tunnel-like alien environments, each ribbon visualising a layer of whatever track is playing beneath you. Follow them cleanly and the music blooms fuller; miss them and it strips back, which is its own quiet punishment. The right stick handles a target-lock shooting system against mechanical enemies and screen-filling bosses, and here is the part the tutorial glosses over: attacks land on the first or third beats of a 4/4 bar, and the game rewards you for timing them precisely. Once that clicks, the shooting stops feeling like an interruption and starts feeling like a second instrument. The two halves pull against each other in a way that is genuinely inventive, even if late-game barriers and homing projectiles occasionally feel like they are breaking the rhythm rather than riding it. The 15-track licensed setlist is the spiritual centre of the whole thing. Noisia, Neosignal, Katy B, The Prototypes, Habstrakt, Muzzy. It reads like a carefully curated festival lineup for a very specific corner of electronic music, and every level has been built around its assigned track rather than just placed on top of one. The low-poly, neon-on-black visual design is built to complement bass-heavy music specifically: flat bold shapes that pulse with the drop rather than compete with it. Headphones are not optional. Three difficulty tiers sit on top of the base experience. Normal is the on-ramp; Advanced requires a 90% completion rate to unlock; Master allows a single life and demands near-perfection. The Chill Out mode, accessible from the start, lets you absorb any level without a score or death screen, which is the right design call for a game this sonically rich. The honest reservations are real, though. Fifteen songs is not a large library, and players who master the upper difficulties may find the content exhausted faster than they would like. The difficulty steps between Advanced and Master modes feel thin. And the tutorial's silence on the beat-timing mechanic for shooting has been frustrating players since launch, not enough to derail a run, but enough to make your first few attempts feel inconsistent in a way that seems like the game's fault before you realise it is yours. If EDM and dubstep are genuinely not your genres, your mileage will vary in ways that no amount of tight controls can fully compensate for. But if any of those fifteen names made you lean in, this is exactly as good as you are hoping.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:aaaRail ShooterTwin-StickEDM SoundtrackRhythm ActionScore AttackChill ModeBoss FightsShort but Replayable

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
NVidia GTX 550
Processor
Intel Core i3

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Game Info

Developer
Mad Fellows
Publisher
Wired Productions
Release Date
Apr 11, 2017

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Frequently asked questions about Aaero

How much does Aaero cost?

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What platforms is Aaero available on?

Aaero is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Aaero released?

Aaero was released on 11 April 2017.

Who developed Aaero?

Aaero was developed by Mad Fellows and published by Wired Productions.