Compare Aery - Little Bird Adventure prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by EpiXR Games UG. Published by EpiXR Games UG. Released on 10/16/2020. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie, Simulation.

Under an hour to finish, a flat difficulty curve, and a looping soundtrack that overstays its welcome: Aery is a micro-experience built for one mood and one mood only, so buy accordingly.

My spreadsheet instincts said 'skip it' the moment I clocked the runtime: reviewers across the board completed all eight levels in roughly one hour, with some finishing closer to thirty minutes. That is not a typo. For a strategy player used to campaigns that run into triple-digit hours, that number alone demands a brutally honest framing before you hand over any money. Aery - Little Bird Adventure is a third-person feather-collection game where you pilot a parrot-like bird through low-polygon dreamscape environments spanning a tropical island, an abandoned town, a snow-capped mountain region, and a handful of other themed stages. There are no enemies, no fail states, no score. You fly, you collect glowing feathers scattered around each level, and the stage ends. That is the full loop, repeated eight times without variation in mechanics or escalating challenge. The flight controls handle like a basic flight sim scheme, which means they are functional but far from graceful. Community feedback is consistent here: the bird moves stiffly, turning feels unresponsive, and you cannot adjust speed or pull off any aerial maneuvers like banking or loops. When you collide with an obstacle, the game resets you to the beginning of the level rather than a nearby checkpoint, which is a minor but genuinely irritating design choice in stages where a feather is camouflaged against heavily stylized, color-saturated backgrounds. That camouflage issue is a real friction point: the feathers emit light but regularly blend into the environment, so finding the last one or two per stage tips from relaxed wandering into pixel-hunt frustration. There is also no free-look camera, meaning you cannot pan around while hovering to scan your surroundings. The audio situation is the weakest link. The soundtrack opens with something atmospheric enough to set a calm tone, but the same loop repeats across every stage without variation. By stage three it is wallpaper, and by stage six it is the reason several players suggest muting the game entirely and queuing up their own music. The visuals are a more mixed story: the hand-drawn, stylized low-poly look has genuine charm in motion, and a few environments are legitimately pleasant to glide through. The narrative is text-only, a surreal poetic journey framed by a giant owl at the start, told in on-screen lines between stages. It is simple and inoffensive, though unskippable text that freezes your movement mid-flight is exactly as annoying as it sounds. Achievements are all story-based and impossible to miss, popping at the end of each level completion. If you are a Gamerscore hunter or achievement completionist on Xbox or PC, this is the game's strongest functional argument. The difficulty curve is, charitably, a straight horizontal line: nothing ramps, nothing tests you, nothing demands a second attempt. For most players looking for mechanical depth, build decisions, or a progression system, there is simply nothing here. Where Aery earns a conditional pass is the very specific use case of a genuinely stressed person who wants twenty to forty minutes of no-consequence low-stimulation interaction, preferably with personal audio substituted for the in-game loop. For that person, on a deep discount, the eight environments and quiet bird-flight fantasy deliver on a narrow promise. Everyone else, including anyone coming from games like AER: Memories of Old expecting comparable flight mechanics, will feel shortchanged by the stiffness and brevity. Diego, Scout Team

Aery - Little Bird Adventure
AdventureCasualIndieSimulation

Aery - Little Bird Adventure

Oct 16, 2020EpiXR Games UG
GamerScout Says

Under an hour to finish, a flat difficulty curve, and a looping soundtrack that overstays its welcome: Aery is a micro-experience built for one mood and one mood only, so buy accordingly.

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About Aery - Little Bird Adventure

My spreadsheet instincts said 'skip it' the moment I clocked the runtime: reviewers across the board completed all eight levels in roughly one hour, with some finishing closer to thirty minutes. That is not a typo. For a strategy player used to campaigns that run into triple-digit hours, that number alone demands a brutally honest framing before you hand over any money. Aery - Little Bird Adventure is a third-person feather-collection game where you pilot a parrot-like bird through low-polygon dreamscape environments spanning a tropical island, an abandoned town, a snow-capped mountain region, and a handful of other themed stages. There are no enemies, no fail states, no score. You fly, you collect glowing feathers scattered around each level, and the stage ends. That is the full loop, repeated eight times without variation in mechanics or escalating challenge. The flight controls handle like a basic flight sim scheme, which means they are functional but far from graceful. Community feedback is consistent here: the bird moves stiffly, turning feels unresponsive, and you cannot adjust speed or pull off any aerial maneuvers like banking or loops. When you collide with an obstacle, the game resets you to the beginning of the level rather than a nearby checkpoint, which is a minor but genuinely irritating design choice in stages where a feather is camouflaged against heavily stylized, color-saturated backgrounds. That camouflage issue is a real friction point: the feathers emit light but regularly blend into the environment, so finding the last one or two per stage tips from relaxed wandering into pixel-hunt frustration. There is also no free-look camera, meaning you cannot pan around while hovering to scan your surroundings. The audio situation is the weakest link. The soundtrack opens with something atmospheric enough to set a calm tone, but the same loop repeats across every stage without variation. By stage three it is wallpaper, and by stage six it is the reason several players suggest muting the game entirely and queuing up their own music. The visuals are a more mixed story: the hand-drawn, stylized low-poly look has genuine charm in motion, and a few environments are legitimately pleasant to glide through. The narrative is text-only, a surreal poetic journey framed by a giant owl at the start, told in on-screen lines between stages. It is simple and inoffensive, though unskippable text that freezes your movement mid-flight is exactly as annoying as it sounds. Achievements are all story-based and impossible to miss, popping at the end of each level completion. If you are a Gamerscore hunter or achievement completionist on Xbox or PC, this is the game's strongest functional argument. The difficulty curve is, charitably, a straight horizontal line: nothing ramps, nothing tests you, nothing demands a second attempt. For most players looking for mechanical depth, build decisions, or a progression system, there is simply nothing here. Where Aery earns a conditional pass is the very specific use case of a genuinely stressed person who wants twenty to forty minutes of no-consequence low-stimulation interaction, preferably with personal audio substituted for the in-game loop. For that person, on a deep discount, the eight environments and quiet bird-flight fantasy deliver on a narrow promise. Everyone else, including anyone coming from games like AER: Memories of Old expecting comparable flight mechanics, will feel shortchanged by the stiffness and brevity. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:indieFeather CollectiblesLow Poly EnvironmentsNo Fail StateAchievement Hunter FriendlySub-1-Hour CompletionText NarrativeFlight ControlsCozy Lite

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7
Memory
4 GB RAM
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GTX600
Processor
Intel Core i5-4590 (AMD FX 8350) or better
Sound Card
No specific requirements.

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 700
Processor
i7 or better
Sound Card
No specific requirements.

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Game Info

Developer
EpiXR Games UG
Publisher
EpiXR Games UG
Release Date
Oct 16, 2020

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What platforms is Aery - Little Bird Adventure available on?

Aery - Little Bird Adventure is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Aery - Little Bird Adventure released?

Aery - Little Bird Adventure was released on 16 October 2020.

Who developed Aery - Little Bird Adventure?

Aery - Little Bird Adventure was developed by EpiXR Games UG.