
Baseball Riot
Angry Birds with a bat and a revenge plot - satisfying for a few sessions, but don't expect it to replace your regular puzzle rotation.
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Screenshots & Media

About Baseball Riot
My honest first reaction to Baseball Riot was a knowing smile: 10tons took the exact same engine and DNA from Tennis in the Face, swapped the racket for a bat, and called it a sequel. That's not a dealbreaker - the core loop is genuinely fun - but it does set the ceiling pretty clearly before you even reach level two. The setup is this: retired batter Gabe Carpaccio needs to knock out waves of Explodz energy-drink-crazed goons spread across single-screen 2D stages. You aim, you swing, the ball ricochets off walls and obstacles, and you try to chain together as many knockouts as possible with a limited supply of pitches. Hit three or more enemies in one shot and the game rewards you with a bonus ball, which at the harder difficulty spikes becomes genuinely necessary. The star system is more interesting than it sounds - you physically have to bat into the stars to collect them rather than earning them as a performance grade at the end, so every shot is a small geometry puzzle. Obstacle variety does grow across the 100-plus levels. Fielders hold up oversized mitts that stop your ball cold. Umpires wear chest armour and have to be hit from behind or in the head. Explodz crates detonate and launch ragdoll bodies into surrounding enemies, and glass panes can kill your momentum entirely if you misread the angle. The problem is that the game introduces all this at a comfortable pace and then stops innovating. By the halfway mark you've seen every trick, and the remaining levels lean on difficulty through tighter geometry rather than new ideas. For a solo, controller-in-hand puzzle session, it holds up just fine in short bursts. The cartoon art style is bright, the ragdoll physics stay funny, and cloud saves mean you can chip away at it across devices without losing progress. That said, there is zero multiplayer, zero couch co-op, and no competitive hook. As a friend who runs Saturday tournaments, I'll be direct: this one stays in the solo column completely. If you're hunting something to pass around at a gathering, look elsewhere. If you want a low-stakes, pick-up-and-put-down puzzler to fill a spare 20 minutes between sessions of something bigger, Baseball Riot does that job cleanly and without the ads or microtransactions that plague its mobile counterpart. Riley, Scout Team
Tags
Steam Deck & Linux
Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 3 ProtonDB community reports.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows XP / Vista / 7 / 8 / 10
- Memory
- 256 MB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 9.0a
- Storage
- 60 MB available space
- Processor
- 1 Ghz
Community Discussion
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Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- 10tons Ltd
- Publisher
- 10tons Ltd
- Release Date
- Jan 17, 2017

