Compare Alien Shooter - Last Hope prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Sigma Team Inc.. Published by Sigma Team Inc.. Released on 11/6/2020. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Indie, RPG.

If a couple of hours of top-down alien carnage with a turret twist sounds like your kind of unwinding, Last Hope delivers exactly that and nothing more. Fans of the 2003 original will recognize the bones immediately.

I went into Last Hope half-expecting a lazy cash-in on one of PC gaming's scrappier cult classics, and the truth is only a little more generous than that. Sigma Team took the core loop of the 2003 original, the top-down isometric corridors, the horde-flood pacing, the satisfying screen-covering gore, and built ten story missions around a single new mechanic: deployable turrets. That one addition does more work than it sounds like it should. The turret system is genuinely the reason to play this over loading up the original Alien Shooter again. You pick your placement before each wave, and in the harder missions the game actually punishes lazy positioning hard enough to make you rethink. Community players have noted that on higher difficulties, knowing which walls the hordes pour through changes everything, so a second run on hard after a casual first pass is a real option if you want to squeeze more out of the runtime. The RPG tag on the store page is loose, but there is a light character progression layer, and the weapon variety, ranging from conventional firearms up through energy weapons, keeps the shooting feeling varied enough across ten missions. Where Last Hope stumbles is easy to name. The presentation is a direct carry-over from the franchise's early-2000s DNA, and not in a charming retro way so much as a "we did not invest heavily here" way. Some players have flagged frame-rate dips and minor bugs that the original titles do not share, which feels like the wrong direction for a smaller follow-up entry. The story is functional at best, a thin lore wrapper to justify moving from room to room. If you need a narrative reason to keep going, this will not provide one. For the right person though, this is a completely honest transaction. It is a short, self-contained, no-subscription, no-ads isometric shooter that knows what it is. The pacing is brisk, the final level delivers a proper boss encounter, and the non-vanishing enemy remains that have been a series signature since the beginning still produce a satisfying visual record of your havoc. It runs on modest hardware and supports modern resolutions without complaint. Coming in at a sub-five-dollar price tier, the ask matches the offering. If you have never touched an Alien Shooter game before, the 2003 original or its Revisited remaster are richer places to start. But if you have history with the series and want a short evening of familiar chaos with one new wrinkle to think about, Last Hope earns its place in the catalogue quietly, without fanfare, the way the small games I like best usually do. Kai, Scout Team

Alien Shooter - Last Hope
ActionIndieRPG

Alien Shooter - Last Hope

Nov 6, 2020Sigma Team Inc.
GamerScout Says

If a couple of hours of top-down alien carnage with a turret twist sounds like your kind of unwinding, Last Hope delivers exactly that and nothing more. Fans of the 2003 original will recognize the bones immediately.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Alien Shooter - Last Hope

I went into Last Hope half-expecting a lazy cash-in on one of PC gaming's scrappier cult classics, and the truth is only a little more generous than that. Sigma Team took the core loop of the 2003 original, the top-down isometric corridors, the horde-flood pacing, the satisfying screen-covering gore, and built ten story missions around a single new mechanic: deployable turrets. That one addition does more work than it sounds like it should. The turret system is genuinely the reason to play this over loading up the original Alien Shooter again. You pick your placement before each wave, and in the harder missions the game actually punishes lazy positioning hard enough to make you rethink. Community players have noted that on higher difficulties, knowing which walls the hordes pour through changes everything, so a second run on hard after a casual first pass is a real option if you want to squeeze more out of the runtime. The RPG tag on the store page is loose, but there is a light character progression layer, and the weapon variety, ranging from conventional firearms up through energy weapons, keeps the shooting feeling varied enough across ten missions. Where Last Hope stumbles is easy to name. The presentation is a direct carry-over from the franchise's early-2000s DNA, and not in a charming retro way so much as a "we did not invest heavily here" way. Some players have flagged frame-rate dips and minor bugs that the original titles do not share, which feels like the wrong direction for a smaller follow-up entry. The story is functional at best, a thin lore wrapper to justify moving from room to room. If you need a narrative reason to keep going, this will not provide one. For the right person though, this is a completely honest transaction. It is a short, self-contained, no-subscription, no-ads isometric shooter that knows what it is. The pacing is brisk, the final level delivers a proper boss encounter, and the non-vanishing enemy remains that have been a series signature since the beginning still produce a satisfying visual record of your havoc. It runs on modest hardware and supports modern resolutions without complaint. Coming in at a sub-five-dollar price tier, the ask matches the offering. If you have never touched an Alien Shooter game before, the 2003 original or its Revisited remaster are richer places to start. But if you have history with the series and want a short evening of familiar chaos with one new wrinkle to think about, Last Hope earns its place in the catalogue quietly, without fanfare, the way the small games I like best usually do. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscloud-savestier:sub-5Turret PlacementHorde CombatIsometric Top-DownBoss BattleCartoon GoreShort CampaignOffline PlayNo Microtransactions

Steam Deck & Linux

ProtonDB Gold

Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 7 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 (service pack 1), 8, 10
Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
200 MB available space
Graphics
512 MB video card
Processor
Intel Core 2 Duo T5200 @1.6GHz / AMD Athlon 64 X2 3600+ @2000MHz or better

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Game Info

Developer
Sigma Team Inc.
Publisher
Sigma Team Inc.
Release Date
Nov 6, 2020

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What platforms is Alien Shooter - Last Hope available on?

Alien Shooter - Last Hope is available on PC.

When was Alien Shooter - Last Hope released?

Alien Shooter - Last Hope was released on 6 November 2020.

Who developed Alien Shooter - Last Hope?

Alien Shooter - Last Hope was developed by Sigma Team Inc..