Compare Action Alien: Tropical prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Devdan Games. Published by Devdan Games. Released on 9/1/2018. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Casual, Indie.

A solo dev's scrappy FPS that drops you on a boat between alien-infested tropical islands - appealingly weird in concept, rougher in execution than you'd hope.

I'll be honest with you: I went into Action Alien: Tropical half-expecting a forgotten gem, the kind of micro-budget solo-dev project that quietly nails one specific feeling and earns its cult following. What I found instead is something more complicated - a first-person shooter built around a genuinely charming hook that doesn't quite have the mechanical legs to carry it all the way home. The setup is this: you pilot a boat across open tropical waters, scout alien-occupied islands, beach yourself, and then clear each one on foot with whatever weapons you can grab. That loop - sea transit, island assault, rinse, repeat - has a loose, unhurried rhythm that almost recalls old arcade shooters where the journey between levels felt deliberate. The revolver and machine gun are your starting tools, and the islands are dotted with bungalows and alien nests you can demolish as you push through. Destructible structures give each firefight a small but satisfying sense of consequence: shoot enough and the place genuinely starts to look cleared out. Where the game struggles is in the depth it offers once that initial island-hopping novelty fades. Community voices noted that the original Action Alien had noticeably more weapon variety, and Tropical feels comparatively thin on that front. Control remapping is also awkward enough that players have gone digging through raw config files to reassign basic movement keys - not the kind of friction you want in a casual action title. The alien placement received post-launch patching to make enemies more reactive when you approach or leave an island by boat, and some visual bugs were addressed, which tells you Devdan is attentive; it also tells you the game shipped with rough edges that needed fixing. Steam reviews sit in mixed territory, which tracks - this is a game some players find breezy and others find thin. Where I want to be fair to it: the solo-developer scope is evident in every corner, and there is something genuinely pleasant about the tropical setting and the unhurried pacing of moving island to island. If you are the kind of player who can appreciate a small, handcrafted project for what it is rather than measuring it against a full-studio release, there is a modest charm here. The ten achievements give light goal-hunters something to tick off, and the session length feels well-sized for the content on offer. It is not a game that overstays its welcome, partly because there is not that much of it. Kai, Scout Team

Action Alien: Tropical
ActionAdventureCasualIndie

Action Alien: Tropical

Sep 1, 2018Devdan Games
GamerScout Says

A solo dev's scrappy FPS that drops you on a boat between alien-infested tropical islands - appealingly weird in concept, rougher in execution than you'd hope.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Action Alien: Tropical

I'll be honest with you: I went into Action Alien: Tropical half-expecting a forgotten gem, the kind of micro-budget solo-dev project that quietly nails one specific feeling and earns its cult following. What I found instead is something more complicated - a first-person shooter built around a genuinely charming hook that doesn't quite have the mechanical legs to carry it all the way home. The setup is this: you pilot a boat across open tropical waters, scout alien-occupied islands, beach yourself, and then clear each one on foot with whatever weapons you can grab. That loop - sea transit, island assault, rinse, repeat - has a loose, unhurried rhythm that almost recalls old arcade shooters where the journey between levels felt deliberate. The revolver and machine gun are your starting tools, and the islands are dotted with bungalows and alien nests you can demolish as you push through. Destructible structures give each firefight a small but satisfying sense of consequence: shoot enough and the place genuinely starts to look cleared out. Where the game struggles is in the depth it offers once that initial island-hopping novelty fades. Community voices noted that the original Action Alien had noticeably more weapon variety, and Tropical feels comparatively thin on that front. Control remapping is also awkward enough that players have gone digging through raw config files to reassign basic movement keys - not the kind of friction you want in a casual action title. The alien placement received post-launch patching to make enemies more reactive when you approach or leave an island by boat, and some visual bugs were addressed, which tells you Devdan is attentive; it also tells you the game shipped with rough edges that needed fixing. Steam reviews sit in mixed territory, which tracks - this is a game some players find breezy and others find thin. Where I want to be fair to it: the solo-developer scope is evident in every corner, and there is something genuinely pleasant about the tropical setting and the unhurried pacing of moving island to island. If you are the kind of player who can appreciate a small, handcrafted project for what it is rather than measuring it against a full-studio release, there is a modest charm here. The ten achievements give light goal-hunters something to tick off, and the session length feels well-sized for the content on offer. It is not a game that overstays its welcome, partly because there is not that much of it. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscloud-savestier:indieIsland HoppingDestructible EnvironmentsBoat TraversalLow-Budget FPSAlien ShooterShort Session

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP or Windows 7
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
DirectX 9 Compatible GPU with 1 GB Video RAM
Processor
2 GHz Dual-Core 64-bit CPU

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Devdan Games
Publisher
Devdan Games
Release Date
Sep 1, 2018

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