
Aether Drift
Six playable Guardians, fourteen multiplayer arenas, and a dimension-swap mechanic that demands actual reflexes - couch-only, no netcode to worry about because there is no online.
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About Aether Drift
I want to be straight with you before you click anything: Aether Drift has no online multiplayer. The tag says multiplayer, the store page implies it, and then buried in the fine print you get the confirmation that this is a local-only experience. The developer even put together a Parsec workaround guide in the community hub for people who want to play remotely, which is a genuine effort, but it also tells you everything about where this sits in the market. If you are looking for a ranked shooter to grind on your 144hz monitor at midnight, keep scrolling. For what it actually is, though, the design is tighter than you might expect from a tiny Wisconsin indie. You pick from six Guardians, each with their own feel, plus a secret seventh for people willing to dig. The core mechanic is the Aether Slip - a dimension-shift dodge that doubles as an offensive tool and an escape valve when wave density gets ugly. In solo arcade mode you cycle through nine themed arenas with difficulty that keeps escalating until the game is essentially trying to kill you at a cellular level. That escalation curve is real: early waves feel manageable, late-game waves feel like someone turned gravity off and replaced it with triangles and moon launchers. Yes, moon launchers. They shoot moons at you. It is exactly what it sounds like. The multiplayer side packs six modes for two to four local players: straight Co-Op where fallen players can be revived, Stock and Timed head-to-head formats across fourteen dedicated arenas, a capture-point mode called Rifts, King of the Hill, and Hot Potato - where one player carries a detonating potato and the chaos is exactly the kind of thing that makes a couch session memorable. Custom match settings and power-up toggles add enough knobs to keep sessions from feeling samey. The cheat code system is a nice touch: beat any of the twenty challenges to unlock modifiers that work across both solo and multiplayer, and some of them are genuinely funny rather than just cosmetic. The honest limitations are real, though. No online play means your enjoyment ceiling is directly tied to how often you have people physically near you who want to play. The game leans hard into controller support (Xbox, Xbox One, PS3, PS4, GameCube), which is the right call for this format, but the developer explicitly warns that local multiplayer runs worse on laptops. That is not a soft warning - they say it will not work well, in all caps. The soundtrack, composed in-house with a clear synthwave-and-80s-arcade DNA, is legitimately good and probably the most polished single element in the package. No critic reviews, no Steam review volume to read the crowd from - you are taking a flier on a small-team passion project. If you have a desktop PC, a few controllers, and people to fill the seats, Aether Drift punches above its budget in the couch-chaos category. If you are alone most of the time or need online to justify any purchase, the solo arcade mode is fun for a few sessions but will not hold you long-term without that social friction the multiplayer is built around. Fred, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7 or Newer
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- Storage
- 500 MB available space
- Graphics
- Recommended ( GT 1030 ) ( Integrated should work fine )
- Processor
- Have one
- Sound Card
- N/A
- Additional Notes
- Local Multiplayer runs better with desktops. Singleplayer should run on most builds.
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- Toxic Sasquatch Games
- Publisher
- Toxic Sasquatch LLC
- Release Date
- Aug 27, 2018