
At the behest of the Pike: Time To Run
A surreal micro-arcade romp rooted in Russian folklore, where a wheeled stove outruns saws across 20 snowy levels. Absurd, fast, and done in minutes, for better or worse.
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About At the behest of the Pike: Time To Run
I will be honest with you: the first time I read the description for this one, I sat back and just appreciated that it exists. A stove on wheels, fleeing a murderous saw through a winter forest, all because a magic pike willed it so. That premise alone tells you everything about the creative headspace RunRun is operating in, and if it made you smile even faintly, you are this game's precise target audience. The core of it is a rhythm-flavored, auto-running side-scroller. Your wheeled stove moves forward on its own, and your entire toolkit is a tap to jump, a hold to accelerate, and a nudge to slow down before obstacles. There are saws to dodge, snowdrifts to clear, and 20 levels laid out on a snowy linear track. The rhythm-action framing is light, more implied by the momentum of the run than enforced by any strict beat detection, but there is a satisfying, almost percussive quality to clearing a tight obstacle sequence cleanly. It rewards muscle memory over reflexes, which is a small but real design distinction. The folklore connection, for those unfamiliar, runs deep. The title pulls from "At the Pike's Behest," a classic East Slavic fairy tale about Emelya, a lazy fool who rides a magic stove to the tsar's court after a pike grants him wishes. The game takes that stove, puts wheels on it, and asks you to race it through peril, which is genuinely the most charming possible adaptation of that source material. Later levels even include text about Russian cultural stereotypes, adding a wry, self-aware layer that I found more interesting than I expected from something this small. Where the game runs into trouble is also exactly where you might predict: it is very short. The curator tag "5 minutes to 100%" is not an exaggeration. The 40 achievements are tied to level completions and collecting score markers in each stage, so if achievement hunting is your angle, this clears a checklist in a single sitting. Whether that feels satisfying or hollow is a personal calibration. The pixel-winter aesthetic is cozy and the audio chugs along pleasantly, but there is not much room for the soundscape or visual world to breathe at this runtime. I wanted the stove's chimney smoke and the crunch of the snow to feel more deliberate, and the game moves too fast through its own atmosphere to let that happen. For anyone who wants a weird, affectionate artifact rooted in Slavic folk tradition, runs in under ten minutes, and comes stuffed with achievements, this is an oddly endearing little curio. Go in knowing what it is: not a lost gem waiting to be discovered, but a micro-game that commits to its absurd premise with quiet sincerity, and ends before it outstays its welcome. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7 or later
- Memory
- 1 GB RAM
- Storage
- 290 MB available space
- Graphics
- opengl 2.0 supported graphics card
- Processor
- intel x86 family, 2Ghz
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Game Info
- Developer
- RunRun
- Publisher
- My Way Games
- Release Date
- Jul 12, 2021