Compare Curse Crackers: For Whom the Belle Toils prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Colorgrave. Published by Colorgrave. Released on 8/30/2022. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Casual, RPG, Simulation.

Sitting at 96% positive on Steam with almost no mainstream coverage, Curse Crackers is the kind of sub-$15 platformer that quietly eats your evening and spits you out 11 hours later at 36% completion, wondering where the time went.

I know strategy is supposed to be my lane, but every so often a game with tight systems thinking in its level design pulls me in just as hard as any 4X map screen. Curse Crackers: For Whom the Belle Toils is one of those games. The core loop is deceptively simple: you play as Belle, a former acrobat, and her sentient golden bell companion Chime, working through a GBC-aesthetic 2D platformer across more than 10 distinct world areas and 50-plus stages. What makes the decision space interesting is how Chime functions as both a weapon and a traversal tool. You throw him in eight directions to knock out enemies, trip switches, hold down lock mechanisms, or bounce off him mid-air to reach higher platforms. Belle can also run-slide-jump in combination to clear long gaps in ways the tutorial never fully explains. The move set has a depth that rewards experimentation, and once it clicks, stringing together inputs to fly through a stage has a rhythm to it that feels genuinely earned rather than handed to you. The structure rewards multiple play styles operating in the same space. Rushing for speed badges and collecting the three roses hidden per stage are completely different problems, and both matter because roses gate later areas and post-game content. Coins dropped by enemies and found in stages can be spent in the overworld town on power-ups, but you lose a portion on death unless you retrieve your pouch from the spot where you fell, adding a small but real risk-reward loop to each run through tougher sections. Boss encounters arrive every two or three stages, and they each have distinct patterns and exploitable weaknesses, making them a genuine test of everything the game has taught you rather than a wall of health points to chip through. Hidden Hollow variants of earlier worlds exist behind secret exits and ramp difficulty significantly, with harder enemy layouts and remixed boss fights, which is exactly the kind of layered optional content that separates a solid platformer from a well-designed one. The presentation is not just nostalgia bait. Colorgrave understands what made Game Boy Color games read well rather than just imitating their color counts. Large, expressive sprites, bold environmental color palettes that shift across each world area, and a chiptune soundtrack that builds thematic variations zone by zone all add up to something that looks and sounds coherent rather than borrowed. The narrative opens with a dense creation myth about a masked dragon and warring children that sets up intriguing lore, then pivots to a lighter carnival-rivalry rescue plot. Some reviewers found that tonal shift jarring, and honestly they are not wrong. The story never quite knits its two threads together cleanly. An entire town of NPCs, readable books, and side quests flesh things out for players who dig, but you can breeze through the main campaign while missing most of it. A few genuine friction points are worth naming. The difficulty curve in bonus levels and late-stage regular levels is steep, with thin checkpoint coverage and a coin-loss death penalty that compounds frustration when controls get fiddly. Precision moves like the long jump and angled Chime throws work best on a D-pad. Thumbstick users will occasionally misfire Chime at a wrong angle and drop into an instant-kill pit, and that feels like an input problem rather than a skill problem. Basic enemy variety across the main run is also light, though the skeleton roster has more variation than it first appears: shielded variants, helmet wearers, lance chargers, and fire-sneezing mummies all demand slightly different approaches. An unlockable Arcade Mode adds a streamlined replay layer for players who want to push times after the credits roll. At its price point this is a straightforwardly good purchase for anyone who has ever cared about how a platformer feels to move through. The decision to make depth optional rather than mandatory is smart: you can finish the main campaign in seven to ten hours while sitting at a third of total completion, or spend dozens of hours chasing every rose, every Hollow, every secret the town lore holds. Both are legitimate ways to play. Diego, Scout Team

Curse Crackers: For Whom the Belle Toils
ActionAdventureCasualRPGSimulation

Curse Crackers: For Whom the Belle Toils

Aug 30, 2022Colorgrave
GamerScout Says

Sitting at 96% positive on Steam with almost no mainstream coverage, Curse Crackers is the kind of sub-$15 platformer that quietly eats your evening and spits you out 11 hours later at 36% completion, wondering where the time went.

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About Curse Crackers: For Whom the Belle Toils

I know strategy is supposed to be my lane, but every so often a game with tight systems thinking in its level design pulls me in just as hard as any 4X map screen. Curse Crackers: For Whom the Belle Toils is one of those games. The core loop is deceptively simple: you play as Belle, a former acrobat, and her sentient golden bell companion Chime, working through a GBC-aesthetic 2D platformer across more than 10 distinct world areas and 50-plus stages. What makes the decision space interesting is how Chime functions as both a weapon and a traversal tool. You throw him in eight directions to knock out enemies, trip switches, hold down lock mechanisms, or bounce off him mid-air to reach higher platforms. Belle can also run-slide-jump in combination to clear long gaps in ways the tutorial never fully explains. The move set has a depth that rewards experimentation, and once it clicks, stringing together inputs to fly through a stage has a rhythm to it that feels genuinely earned rather than handed to you. The structure rewards multiple play styles operating in the same space. Rushing for speed badges and collecting the three roses hidden per stage are completely different problems, and both matter because roses gate later areas and post-game content. Coins dropped by enemies and found in stages can be spent in the overworld town on power-ups, but you lose a portion on death unless you retrieve your pouch from the spot where you fell, adding a small but real risk-reward loop to each run through tougher sections. Boss encounters arrive every two or three stages, and they each have distinct patterns and exploitable weaknesses, making them a genuine test of everything the game has taught you rather than a wall of health points to chip through. Hidden Hollow variants of earlier worlds exist behind secret exits and ramp difficulty significantly, with harder enemy layouts and remixed boss fights, which is exactly the kind of layered optional content that separates a solid platformer from a well-designed one. The presentation is not just nostalgia bait. Colorgrave understands what made Game Boy Color games read well rather than just imitating their color counts. Large, expressive sprites, bold environmental color palettes that shift across each world area, and a chiptune soundtrack that builds thematic variations zone by zone all add up to something that looks and sounds coherent rather than borrowed. The narrative opens with a dense creation myth about a masked dragon and warring children that sets up intriguing lore, then pivots to a lighter carnival-rivalry rescue plot. Some reviewers found that tonal shift jarring, and honestly they are not wrong. The story never quite knits its two threads together cleanly. An entire town of NPCs, readable books, and side quests flesh things out for players who dig, but you can breeze through the main campaign while missing most of it. A few genuine friction points are worth naming. The difficulty curve in bonus levels and late-stage regular levels is steep, with thin checkpoint coverage and a coin-loss death penalty that compounds frustration when controls get fiddly. Precision moves like the long jump and angled Chime throws work best on a D-pad. Thumbstick users will occasionally misfire Chime at a wrong angle and drop into an instant-kill pit, and that feels like an input problem rather than a skill problem. Basic enemy variety across the main run is also light, though the skeleton roster has more variation than it first appears: shielded variants, helmet wearers, lance chargers, and fire-sneezing mummies all demand slightly different approaches. An unlockable Arcade Mode adds a streamlined replay layer for players who want to push times after the credits roll. At its price point this is a straightforwardly good purchase for anyone who has ever cared about how a platformer feels to move through. The decision to make depth optional rather than mandatory is smart: you can finish the main campaign in seven to ten hours while sitting at a third of total completion, or spend dozens of hours chasing every rose, every Hollow, every secret the town lore holds. Both are legitimate ways to play. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Speedrun-FriendlyArcade ModeCompanion MechanicD-pad RecommendedSecret HuntingPost-Game ContentChiptune SoundtrackRisk-Reward Economy

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 10 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 (SP1+) and Windows 10
DirectX
Version 10
Storage
224 MB available space
Graphics
DX10, DX11, DX12 capable
Processor
x86, x64 architecture with SSE2 instruction set support

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
Colorgrave
Publisher
Colorgrave
Release Date
Aug 30, 2022

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Curse Crackers: For Whom the Belle Toils is available on PC.

When was Curse Crackers: For Whom the Belle Toils released?

Curse Crackers: For Whom the Belle Toils was released on 30 August 2022.

Who developed Curse Crackers: For Whom the Belle Toils?

Curse Crackers: For Whom the Belle Toils was developed by Colorgrave.