Compare Blade Jumper prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by bit paradigm. Published by CFK Co., Ltd.. Released on 9/9/2022. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Casual, Indie.

One button to jump, slash, and survive a dystopian Seoul skyscraper. Blade Jumper earns its difficulty the honest way, through tight design rather than cheap tricks.

I have a soft spot for games that dare to strip the control scheme down to near-nothing and ask whether pure mechanical focus can carry a whole experience. Blade Jumper does exactly that, and the answer is a qualified yes. Solo developer bit paradigm built an entire 2D action platformer around a single unified action: the jump attack slash. Every movement, every fight, every platform transition flows from that one input. It sounds absurdly minimal, but the ceiling on skill expression is higher than you would expect, and that tension between simplicity and mastery is where the game lives. The setting is doing real work here. Seoul, 2045. A private dystopia called Kukuru Tower dominates Yeouido, housing the chosen one percent while the authoritarian Unreality conglomerate keeps the rest of the city pacified with its addictive Kukuru Candies. You play a former agent recruited by vigilante group Ground Z to climb the tower from the outside in, peeling back layers of a world that grows stranger and more unsettling the higher you ascend. The story is delivered through environmental records and character encounters rather than cut-scenes, which suits the pacing. It is lean, a little oblique, and genuinely curious. The pixel art stages shift in tone zone by zone, each floor of the tower carrying its own visual personality, from clinical white corridors to what the game calls a "very crazy place" inside the sealed upper floors. Cute doll robots serve as your primary antagonists, each with distinct behaviors and placement patterns that require actual reading rather than button-mashing. The difficulty is real, and the punishment for failure is steep. Getting hit by enemy units can send you back to a checkpoint that is less forgiving than modern precision platformer players might expect. Mastering the timing of the jump attack slash so that it handles movement and combat simultaneously takes genuine patience, especially in the denser mid-tower sections. If you approach this casually, you will bounce off it. If you enjoy the rhythm that comes from finally threading a hard segment cleanly, there is something quietly satisfying here. The community reception on Steam sits around 80 percent positive from a small sample, which tracks. The people who connect with it really connect with it; the people who do not find the single-input constraint suffocating. Where Blade Jumper is less assured is in communicating its ideas to new players. There is little hand-holding, which is philosophically consistent but occasionally tips into opacity. The map topography and hidden traps can feel less designed and more arbitrary until you understand the language of each zone. The story, for all its intriguing dystopian dressing, resolves questions at a pace that demands patience from the narrative side as much as the action side. These are not disqualifying problems. They are the rough edges you accept when a solo developer is working at the outer limits of their scope. For fans of precision platformers with a narrative spine and a willingness to learn a game on its own terms, Blade Jumper is a quiet curio worth the time. It knows what it wants to be, and it commits without apology. Kai, Scout Team

Blade Jumper
ActionAdventureCasualIndie

Blade Jumper

Sep 9, 2022bit paradigmCFK Co., Ltd.
GamerScout Says

One button to jump, slash, and survive a dystopian Seoul skyscraper. Blade Jumper earns its difficulty the honest way, through tight design rather than cheap tricks.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Blade Jumper

I have a soft spot for games that dare to strip the control scheme down to near-nothing and ask whether pure mechanical focus can carry a whole experience. Blade Jumper does exactly that, and the answer is a qualified yes. Solo developer bit paradigm built an entire 2D action platformer around a single unified action: the jump attack slash. Every movement, every fight, every platform transition flows from that one input. It sounds absurdly minimal, but the ceiling on skill expression is higher than you would expect, and that tension between simplicity and mastery is where the game lives. The setting is doing real work here. Seoul, 2045. A private dystopia called Kukuru Tower dominates Yeouido, housing the chosen one percent while the authoritarian Unreality conglomerate keeps the rest of the city pacified with its addictive Kukuru Candies. You play a former agent recruited by vigilante group Ground Z to climb the tower from the outside in, peeling back layers of a world that grows stranger and more unsettling the higher you ascend. The story is delivered through environmental records and character encounters rather than cut-scenes, which suits the pacing. It is lean, a little oblique, and genuinely curious. The pixel art stages shift in tone zone by zone, each floor of the tower carrying its own visual personality, from clinical white corridors to what the game calls a "very crazy place" inside the sealed upper floors. Cute doll robots serve as your primary antagonists, each with distinct behaviors and placement patterns that require actual reading rather than button-mashing. The difficulty is real, and the punishment for failure is steep. Getting hit by enemy units can send you back to a checkpoint that is less forgiving than modern precision platformer players might expect. Mastering the timing of the jump attack slash so that it handles movement and combat simultaneously takes genuine patience, especially in the denser mid-tower sections. If you approach this casually, you will bounce off it. If you enjoy the rhythm that comes from finally threading a hard segment cleanly, there is something quietly satisfying here. The community reception on Steam sits around 80 percent positive from a small sample, which tracks. The people who connect with it really connect with it; the people who do not find the single-input constraint suffocating. Where Blade Jumper is less assured is in communicating its ideas to new players. There is little hand-holding, which is philosophically consistent but occasionally tips into opacity. The map topography and hidden traps can feel less designed and more arbitrary until you understand the language of each zone. The story, for all its intriguing dystopian dressing, resolves questions at a pace that demands patience from the narrative side as much as the action side. These are not disqualifying problems. They are the rough edges you accept when a solo developer is working at the outer limits of their scope. For fans of precision platformers with a narrative spine and a willingness to learn a game on its own terms, Blade Jumper is a quiet curio worth the time. It knows what it wants to be, and it commits without apology. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertier:sub-5Precision PlatformerOne-Button CombatDystopian NarrativeZone-Based ProgressionPixel ArtKorean IndieCheckpoint PunishmentStory-Driven Platformer

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
windows10 64bit
Memory
4 GB RAM
Storage
500 MB available space
Graphics
intel(R) UHD Graphics 620
Processor
intel(r) core(tm) i3-7100u cpu @ 2.40ghz

Recommended

OS
windows10 64bit
Memory
4 GB RAM
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
intel(R) UHD Graphics 620
Processor
intel(R) core(tm) i5-7500 cpu @ 3.40ghz

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Game Info

Developer
bit paradigm
Publisher
CFK Co., Ltd.
Release Date
Sep 9, 2022

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Compare Blade Jumper prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Blade Jumper available on?

Blade Jumper is available on PC.

When was Blade Jumper released?

Blade Jumper was released on 9 September 2022.

Who developed Blade Jumper?

Blade Jumper was developed by bit paradigm and published by CFK Co., Ltd..