Compare ARK BOX Unlimited prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by PolarityFlow, Adrian Zingg. Published by PolarityFlow. Released on 11/29/2016. Available on PC, Linux. Genres: Action, Casual, Indie.

Arkanoid in a sci-fi skin with a built-in stage editor and Workshop support - the controls have a learning curve and the community is tiny, but the creator tools are the real draw here.

I have a soft spot for the kind of game that quietly does one thing and then tacks on a surprisingly capable editor. ARK BOX Unlimited is exactly that: a breakout-style arcade game in the lineage of Arkanoid and Breakout, wrapped in a 2D sci-fi skin, released by the small Swiss studio PolarityFlow back in 2016 and still sitting on Steam with fewer reviews than some games get in a single lunch hour. That obscurity, though, is not the whole story. The core loop is block-busting ball-bouncing paddle control, but the studio layered things on top of it that lift it above a plain genre clone. There are Ark Upgrades that modify your weapons, speed, and paddle size, a planet shield mechanic that works as a defensive twist, and four distinct difficulty and speed tiers for the score-attack crowd who want to push leaderboard positions. The campaign runs 36 missions with bonus stages and boss fights, and there is a separate arcade survival mode for non-stop runs. Two-player local co-op is available, which is a genuine surprise at this price tier. Four game modes - Novel, Classic, Custom, and Randomized - give you a reason to revisit the same stage pool with different rule sets. The editor is where the game earns its name. There are 32 user slots, an export function, and full Steam Workshop integration. You can build a stage, upload it, and pull down community work instantly. The Workshop community is small - that is just the reality of a 2016 release with very low visibility - but the toolset itself is clean enough that a patient player could spend more time building than playing the shipped campaign. That ratio is either a selling point or a red flag depending on what you came for. The honest downsides deserve air time. Community reports flag a control scheme that feels strange out of the box - holding the mouse button to move the paddle read as genuinely uncomfortable to at least one Steam reviewer. The in-game tutorial is thin, with key bindings buried in a manual that is not surfaced prominently inside the game. A controller drift bug has been reported by at least one player. And the broader point stands: this is a micro-release with a micro-footprint. PolarityFlow are a real studio based in Zurich with a music production setup and other games to their name, so the bones are professional, but ARK BOX Unlimited itself has not seen the attention or post-launch polish that would round off its rougher edges. Who is it for, then? Retro arcade fans who genuinely enjoy score-attack leaderboard grinding, people who want to mess with a level editor for a genre they already love, or anyone picking up the PolarityFlow bundle who gets this alongside other titles. Going in with fresh expectations for the control scheme and near-empty Workshop is the only honest way to approach it. There is a small, sincere thing here - it just asks for patience. Kai, Scout Team

ARK BOX Unlimited
ActionCasualIndie

ARK BOX Unlimited

Nov 29, 2016PolarityFlow, Adrian ZinggPolarityFlow
GamerScout Says

Arkanoid in a sci-fi skin with a built-in stage editor and Workshop support - the controls have a learning curve and the community is tiny, but the creator tools are the real draw here.

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About ARK BOX Unlimited

I have a soft spot for the kind of game that quietly does one thing and then tacks on a surprisingly capable editor. ARK BOX Unlimited is exactly that: a breakout-style arcade game in the lineage of Arkanoid and Breakout, wrapped in a 2D sci-fi skin, released by the small Swiss studio PolarityFlow back in 2016 and still sitting on Steam with fewer reviews than some games get in a single lunch hour. That obscurity, though, is not the whole story. The core loop is block-busting ball-bouncing paddle control, but the studio layered things on top of it that lift it above a plain genre clone. There are Ark Upgrades that modify your weapons, speed, and paddle size, a planet shield mechanic that works as a defensive twist, and four distinct difficulty and speed tiers for the score-attack crowd who want to push leaderboard positions. The campaign runs 36 missions with bonus stages and boss fights, and there is a separate arcade survival mode for non-stop runs. Two-player local co-op is available, which is a genuine surprise at this price tier. Four game modes - Novel, Classic, Custom, and Randomized - give you a reason to revisit the same stage pool with different rule sets. The editor is where the game earns its name. There are 32 user slots, an export function, and full Steam Workshop integration. You can build a stage, upload it, and pull down community work instantly. The Workshop community is small - that is just the reality of a 2016 release with very low visibility - but the toolset itself is clean enough that a patient player could spend more time building than playing the shipped campaign. That ratio is either a selling point or a red flag depending on what you came for. The honest downsides deserve air time. Community reports flag a control scheme that feels strange out of the box - holding the mouse button to move the paddle read as genuinely uncomfortable to at least one Steam reviewer. The in-game tutorial is thin, with key bindings buried in a manual that is not surfaced prominently inside the game. A controller drift bug has been reported by at least one player. And the broader point stands: this is a micro-release with a micro-footprint. PolarityFlow are a real studio based in Zurich with a music production setup and other games to their name, so the bones are professional, but ARK BOX Unlimited itself has not seen the attention or post-launch polish that would round off its rougher edges. Who is it for, then? Retro arcade fans who genuinely enjoy score-attack leaderboard grinding, people who want to mess with a level editor for a genre they already love, or anyone picking up the PolarityFlow bundle who gets this alongside other titles. Going in with fresh expectations for the control scheme and near-empty Workshop is the only honest way to approach it. There is a small, sincere thing here - it just asks for patience. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerlocal-coopachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardsworkshoptier:indieBreakout-styleScore AttackStage EditorBoss FightsLocal Co-opSci-Fi ArcadeLeaderboardUpgrade SystemSurvival Mode

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP or above
Storage
120 MB available space
Graphics
Direct X compatible
Processor
Intel Pentium 4 or newer

Recommended

OS
Windows 8.1 / 10
DirectX
Version 9.0a
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
Geforce or Radeon Gen. 6+
Processor
Intel Core i

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
PolarityFlow, Adrian Zingg
Publisher
PolarityFlow
Release Date
Nov 29, 2016

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