Compare Aura of Worlds prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Cognitive Forge. Published by indie.io. Released on 9/24/2024. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie.

A Spelunky-lineage roguelite that rewards lateral thinking over button-mashing - throw an enemy into a laser field, blow up the floor under a chest, or use a lantern as a Molotov. Cognitive Forge spent years getting this right, and it shows.

I have a soft spot for games that treat every object in a room as a potential tool, and Aura of Worlds leans into that philosophy harder than almost anything else in the roguelite space right now. The Melbourne-based Cognitive Forge team spent years in Steam Early Access iterating on this thing, gathering player feedback, and the full 1.0 release that landed in September 2024 feels earned rather than rushed. It carries the spiritual DNA of Spelunky and Terraria - games where a simple interaction can cascade into something ridiculous and wonderful - but it builds its own identity through sheer density of systems. The core loop is procedurally generated 2D platforming across 14 or more level themes, each with their own environmental hazards: tidal corridors riddled with mines, caverns filling with toxic pollen, lava that respects no platforming skill, carnivorous plants that punish hesitation. You pick your approach on the fly. The spear and energy shield let you play cautiously, trading mobility for durability. Swap to the boomerang and grapple hook and suddenly you are a chaotic pendulum swinging through rooms you probably should not survive. There are also runes, potions, gear modifiers, and rescuable NPCs like Milla the Blacksmith who, once freed, extends your meta-progression options back at the hub. Over 100 unique enemies keep the threat variety high enough that muscle memory alone will not carry you - a skeleton crossbowman and an evasive magician require completely different read-and-react rhythms. Boss encounters scale in complexity rather than just health bars, and the occasional giant worm filling an entire chamber forces you to rethink the room itself as the arena. What makes all of this feel unusual is the object interactivity. A lantern is not just scenery; you can carry it for light, hurl it as a Molotov, or shoot it to ignite a cluster of enemies. Rocks fall if you strike the ceiling above them, and they hit you just as readily as your enemies if you are careless. Laser traps can be neutralised by blowing up their conduit, bypassed with a blink ability, or exploited by throwing a creature through the beam. The game does not tell you all of this upfront - you discover it through failure, and that discovery loop is genuinely satisfying rather than punishing. Three difficulty settings (Easy, Moderate, Hard) give you room to experiment without gating you out entirely, though Easy does lock some achievements, which is a minor nuisance worth knowing about. The audiovisual side is where the craft of a small, attentive studio shows most clearly. The pixel art pulls from a retro arcade register without feeling like nostalgia bait - the enemy animations in particular carry real character. The chiptune soundtrack shifts tone biome by biome, and there is a quality of intentional sound design in the effects that makes the chaos feel textured rather than noisy. This is not a game made by people who slapped a sprite sheet on a procedural engine; it is one where someone cared what it sounded like when a skull explodes a lamp. The honest caveats: narrative is thin, still more lore-hint than story even after the post-1.0 additions, and players who want strong authored pacing will find the roguelite structure resists that craving by design. The opening hours have a steepness that can feel disorienting - the environment interaction systems are not tutorialised aggressively, so expect to accidentally drop rocks on your own head a few times before the penny drops. For those willing to sit with that initial friction, the game opens up considerably. Kai, Scout Team

Aura of Worlds
ActionAdventureIndie

Aura of Worlds

Sep 24, 2024Cognitive Forgeindie.io
GamerScout Says

A Spelunky-lineage roguelite that rewards lateral thinking over button-mashing - throw an enemy into a laser field, blow up the floor under a chest, or use a lantern as a Molotov. Cognitive Forge spent years getting this right, and it shows.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Aura of Worlds

I have a soft spot for games that treat every object in a room as a potential tool, and Aura of Worlds leans into that philosophy harder than almost anything else in the roguelite space right now. The Melbourne-based Cognitive Forge team spent years in Steam Early Access iterating on this thing, gathering player feedback, and the full 1.0 release that landed in September 2024 feels earned rather than rushed. It carries the spiritual DNA of Spelunky and Terraria - games where a simple interaction can cascade into something ridiculous and wonderful - but it builds its own identity through sheer density of systems. The core loop is procedurally generated 2D platforming across 14 or more level themes, each with their own environmental hazards: tidal corridors riddled with mines, caverns filling with toxic pollen, lava that respects no platforming skill, carnivorous plants that punish hesitation. You pick your approach on the fly. The spear and energy shield let you play cautiously, trading mobility for durability. Swap to the boomerang and grapple hook and suddenly you are a chaotic pendulum swinging through rooms you probably should not survive. There are also runes, potions, gear modifiers, and rescuable NPCs like Milla the Blacksmith who, once freed, extends your meta-progression options back at the hub. Over 100 unique enemies keep the threat variety high enough that muscle memory alone will not carry you - a skeleton crossbowman and an evasive magician require completely different read-and-react rhythms. Boss encounters scale in complexity rather than just health bars, and the occasional giant worm filling an entire chamber forces you to rethink the room itself as the arena. What makes all of this feel unusual is the object interactivity. A lantern is not just scenery; you can carry it for light, hurl it as a Molotov, or shoot it to ignite a cluster of enemies. Rocks fall if you strike the ceiling above them, and they hit you just as readily as your enemies if you are careless. Laser traps can be neutralised by blowing up their conduit, bypassed with a blink ability, or exploited by throwing a creature through the beam. The game does not tell you all of this upfront - you discover it through failure, and that discovery loop is genuinely satisfying rather than punishing. Three difficulty settings (Easy, Moderate, Hard) give you room to experiment without gating you out entirely, though Easy does lock some achievements, which is a minor nuisance worth knowing about. The audiovisual side is where the craft of a small, attentive studio shows most clearly. The pixel art pulls from a retro arcade register without feeling like nostalgia bait - the enemy animations in particular carry real character. The chiptune soundtrack shifts tone biome by biome, and there is a quality of intentional sound design in the effects that makes the chaos feel textured rather than noisy. This is not a game made by people who slapped a sprite sheet on a procedural engine; it is one where someone cared what it sounded like when a skull explodes a lamp. The honest caveats: narrative is thin, still more lore-hint than story even after the post-1.0 additions, and players who want strong authored pacing will find the roguelite structure resists that craving by design. The opening hours have a steepness that can feel disorienting - the environment interaction systems are not tutorialised aggressively, so expect to accidentally drop rocks on your own head a few times before the penny drops. For those willing to sit with that initial friction, the game opens up considerably. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Environmental InteractionChiptune SoundtrackTactical RogueliteObject PhysicsHub ProgressionBiome VarietySpelunky-likeMulti-Solution Puzzles

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 or higher
Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
Either Direct X or Open GL Version 3.4 or higher
Processor
2 Ghz
Additional Notes
.Net framework required

Recommended

Memory
2 GB RAM

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Cognitive Forge
Publisher
indie.io
Release Date
Sep 24, 2024

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Price History

2026-06-051.19(lowest)

Frequently asked questions about Aura of Worlds

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What platforms is Aura of Worlds available on?

Aura of Worlds is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was Aura of Worlds released?

Aura of Worlds was released on 24 September 2024.

Who developed Aura of Worlds?

Aura of Worlds was developed by Cognitive Forge and published by indie.io.