Compare Adventures of Pip prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Tic Toc Games. Published by Tic Toc Games. Released on 6/4/2015. Available on PC, Mac, Xbox. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie. Metacritic score: 72/100.

A clever little underdog platformer built around one genuinely inspired idea: Pip shrinks and grows through pixel history, and the whole game is built around that single conceit pulling its weight.

I have a soft spot for games that commit fully to one mechanic and refuse to let go of it, and Adventures of Pip is exactly that kind of focused, handcrafted thing. Tic Toc Games took a concept that sounds like a Kickstarter pitch on paper, your hero evolves from a single pixel all the way up to a 16-bit sprite by absorbing the resolution of defeated enemies, and built a 36-level platformer almost entirely around what that transformation means moment-to-moment. That restraint, more than any individual level, is what makes this game feel intentional. The three-form system is where the real texture lives. Pixel Pip is a wispy, gliding thing: minimal offensive ability, but small enough to float across gaps and slip through tight spaces that would stop his beefier selves cold. Eight-bit Pip runs faster, can punch, can wall-jump up vertical shafts. Sixteen-bit Pip hauls out a sword and shoves blocks around, but pays for it with weight and bulk. Knowing when to devolve mid-air to catch a wall, or when to shred down to your single-pixel self at the bottom of a pool to pop high enough to reach a platform, those moments genuinely reward spatial thinking, and they arrive consistently enough that the game never feels like it is repeating itself on autopilot. The checkpoint system is forgiving; death sends you back a short distance and strips away nothing, so experimentation is always encouraged. There are honest limitations worth knowing about. The enemy variety is thin, and critics across the board noticed that the core mechanic, for all its brilliance, only ever applies to Pip himself, no enemies, no terrain, nothing else in the world shifts resolution alongside him. It creates an asymmetry that leaves you imagining a slightly more ambitious version of this game. Some reviews found later worlds grew repetitive once the novelty of the third form settled in, and the soundtrack is a real point of contention: some listeners found it charming and symphonic, others switched it off entirely. The writing leans hard into pixel-based dad jokes, which will either make you smile or wear thin around world three. Completionists have trapped villagers to rescue in each level and gems to spend at shops on permanent upgrades, but do not expect much replayability beyond a single clean run of seven to ten hours. What Adventures of Pip gets right is tone. It carries itself with genuine warmth, the kind you feel from a small team that believed in its idea and saw it through without compromising it into something else. It sits comfortably in the middle of the difficulty spectrum, never Meat Boy, never trivial, and the controls are precise enough that when you fumble a platform, the fault is yours. That trust between the game and the player matters. For someone newer to platformers, or a parent looking for something charming that does not punish curiosity, it is an easy recommendation. For veterans who have already filed Shovel Knight and its peers away as completed, this is a lighter, shorter thing, worthwhile for the central gimmick, aware of its own scope, and honest about what it is. Kai, Scout Team

Adventures of Pip
ActionAdventureIndie

Adventures of Pip

Jun 4, 2015Tic Toc Games
GamerScout Says

A clever little underdog platformer built around one genuinely inspired idea: Pip shrinks and grows through pixel history, and the whole game is built around that single conceit pulling its weight.

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About Adventures of Pip

I have a soft spot for games that commit fully to one mechanic and refuse to let go of it, and Adventures of Pip is exactly that kind of focused, handcrafted thing. Tic Toc Games took a concept that sounds like a Kickstarter pitch on paper, your hero evolves from a single pixel all the way up to a 16-bit sprite by absorbing the resolution of defeated enemies, and built a 36-level platformer almost entirely around what that transformation means moment-to-moment. That restraint, more than any individual level, is what makes this game feel intentional. The three-form system is where the real texture lives. Pixel Pip is a wispy, gliding thing: minimal offensive ability, but small enough to float across gaps and slip through tight spaces that would stop his beefier selves cold. Eight-bit Pip runs faster, can punch, can wall-jump up vertical shafts. Sixteen-bit Pip hauls out a sword and shoves blocks around, but pays for it with weight and bulk. Knowing when to devolve mid-air to catch a wall, or when to shred down to your single-pixel self at the bottom of a pool to pop high enough to reach a platform, those moments genuinely reward spatial thinking, and they arrive consistently enough that the game never feels like it is repeating itself on autopilot. The checkpoint system is forgiving; death sends you back a short distance and strips away nothing, so experimentation is always encouraged. There are honest limitations worth knowing about. The enemy variety is thin, and critics across the board noticed that the core mechanic, for all its brilliance, only ever applies to Pip himself, no enemies, no terrain, nothing else in the world shifts resolution alongside him. It creates an asymmetry that leaves you imagining a slightly more ambitious version of this game. Some reviews found later worlds grew repetitive once the novelty of the third form settled in, and the soundtrack is a real point of contention: some listeners found it charming and symphonic, others switched it off entirely. The writing leans hard into pixel-based dad jokes, which will either make you smile or wear thin around world three. Completionists have trapped villagers to rescue in each level and gems to spend at shops on permanent upgrades, but do not expect much replayability beyond a single clean run of seven to ten hours. What Adventures of Pip gets right is tone. It carries itself with genuine warmth, the kind you feel from a small team that believed in its idea and saw it through without compromising it into something else. It sits comfortably in the middle of the difficulty spectrum, never Meat Boy, never trivial, and the controls are precise enough that when you fumble a platform, the fault is yours. That trust between the game and the player matters. For someone newer to platformers, or a parent looking for something charming that does not punish curiosity, it is an easy recommendation. For veterans who have already filed Shovel Knight and its peers away as completed, this is a lighter, shorter thing, worthwhile for the central gimmick, aware of its own scope, and honest about what it is. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:sub-5Pixel Evolution MechanicForm-SwitchingForgiving DifficultyCollectible VillagersRetro AestheticDad-Joke WritingShort CampaignUpgrade Shop

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 6 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP SP2
Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
550 MB available space
Graphics
Intel video graphics card 2000/3000 256MB
Processor
Intel Dual Core 2.1 or higher

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
72

Game Info

Developer
Tic Toc Games
Publisher
Tic Toc Games
Release Date
Jun 4, 2015

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Price History

2026-06-072.65(lowest)

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What platforms is Adventures of Pip available on?

Adventures of Pip is available on PC, Mac, Xbox.

When was Adventures of Pip released?

Adventures of Pip was released on 4 June 2015.

Who developed Adventures of Pip?

Adventures of Pip was developed by Tic Toc Games.

Is Adventures of Pip worth buying?

Adventures of Pip holds a Metacritic score of 72/100, making it one of the standout Action titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.