
Alien Planet Explorer
A hand-drawn 2D platformer so short and quiet it almost whispers - worth a glance if you want a no-pressure alien ruins crawl, skip it if you need depth.
Compare Prices(0 stores)
Loading prices...
We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.
Screenshots & Media

About Alien Planet Explorer
My first impression of Alien Planet Explorer was that it exists in a category I have soft spot for: the tiny, barely-noticed Steam release that nobody writes about, built by a solo or micro team with a clear visual mood and a single unpretentious idea. The game drops you onto a colorful alien world, ruins of an extinct civilization scattered around you, and asks one simple question - can you reach the ancient temple at the end? That is the whole contract, and honestly, for what it is, the contract is honored. The core loop is classic 2D side-scrolling: you move, you jump, you fight enemies, you dodge traps. The hand-drawn, cartoon-adjacent art style gives the world a gentle warmth that sits somewhere between a children's illustrated novel and a Sunday-afternoon Flash game from the early 2010s. The color palette leans colorful and fantasy-alien rather than gritty sci-fi, which suits the casual pace. Community tags like "Atmospheric" and "Colorful" are not wrong - the world has a pleasant, unhurried quality to it. The soundtrack, while not something I can call complex, carries that same mood: soft, unobtrusive, functional. For a game at this price tier, the soundscape does its job without embarrassing itself. Where honesty demands a pause: Alien Planet Explorer is extremely short and extremely simple. There are only 6 Steam achievements, which tells you something about the breadth of content. Enemy encounters amount to "approach and deal with," and the trap-dodging never escalates into anything demanding. There is no build variety, no branching path, no loot system with weight behind it. The hidden-object and puzzle tags in the Steam community suggest some light discovery elements, but do not expect anything that will stump you for long. The review pool is tiny - ten user reviews at 80% positive - which means the signal is real but thin. The people who liked it seem to like it for what it is: a gentle, undemanding trip through pretty alien scenery. Who is this for? Honestly, it is for the player who wants something low-stakes and visually cheerful for an hour or two - maybe a younger player just getting into platformers, or someone who collects small indie curiosities the way others collect stamps. It is not for anyone chasing challenge, systemic depth, or a story with teeth. As a narrative experience, it is closer to a mood piece than a crafted arc. I respect small games that know their lane, and this one mostly does. The craft is modest but not careless, and the alien-ruins setting has a quiet melancholy that I found more affecting than I expected from something so brief. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7/8.1/10
- Memory
- 1024 MB RAM
- Storage
- 650 MB available space
- Graphics
- GTX 1030
- Processor
- 2.0 GHz Dual Core
Recommended
- OS
- WINDOWS 10
- Memory
- 2048 MB RAM
- Storage
- 650 MB available space
- Graphics
- GTX 1050
- Processor
- 2.3 GHz Dual Core
Community Discussion
Be the first to comment on Alien Planet Explorer.
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- Seiren-publishing
- Publisher
- Seiren-publishing
- Release Date
- May 11, 2021
