
Dr. Science quest
A pocket-sized collectathon platformer that hides inside a scientist's fractured dreamscape - worth a glance if you want pixel charm with no time commitment and can forgive rough edges.
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About Dr. Science quest
I went in with almost zero expectations, which is probably the correct calibration for Dr. Science Quest. What you get is a compact 2D side-scrolling platformer built around a collectathon loop: a female protagonist dropped into the labyrinthine subconscious of a sleeping scientist, chasing scattered computers through a series of dream-world stages. The premise is genuinely quirky in that small, untranslated-from-passion-project way that I find endearing. The nightmare-as-level-select framing gives each stage a reason to feel visually distinct, and on that narrow front it mostly delivers. The core loop is straightforward: move through a side-scrolling stage, dodge projectiles fired by the scientist's own rebellious robot inventions, collect every computer terminal hidden across the level, and find the exit before the dream collapses around you. There is no weapon system, no ability tree, no branching path. The challenge comes from the platforming gauntlet itself - enemy placements, trap corridors, and the score-attack pressure of the collectathon structure. Community tags flag the game as Difficult, and the Steam community page has at least one tongue-in-cheek guide suggesting the only way out is quitting. Whether that reads as charming or infuriating will depend entirely on your patience for trial-and-error platforming with limited handholding. The pixel art carries the production. Graphics credited to MilordGAME lean colorful and stylized rather than realistic, and the hand-drawn quality of the environments lends the dream-world conceit a faint surreal warmth. The soundtrack, composed by Unitgu, is the detail I keep coming back to - for a sub-five-dollar indie with a tiny review pool, the audio work feels more considered than the price tag would suggest. Mood and soundscape are where this kind of small game can quietly punch above its weight, and Dr. Science Quest at least tries. Whether the compositions are lengthy or varied enough to sustain a full playthrough is harder to confirm from the outside, but the intent is clearly there. The honest caveat is that this is a micro-title with a micro-footprint. Fewer than thirty people own it on tracking sites, and the review pool sits at around eleven voices at 90% positive - a warm signal, but too small to be conclusive. There is no multiplayer, no procedural generation despite a Roguelike tag floating around, and no visible post-launch content updates. The linear structure means replay value is whatever you make of score-attack runs and collectathon completionism. If you want a short, weird, pixel platformer with a dreamy lab-science skin and a soundtrack someone actually cared about, there is something honest here. If you need mechanical depth or a reason to return after the credits, look elsewhere. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows XP\Vista\7\8\10
- Memory
- 1024 MB RAM
- Storage
- 168 MB available space
- Graphics
- Intel HD 4000
- Processor
- 2.3 GHz Dual Core
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Game Info
- Developer
- Uncharted Realms
- Publisher
- Uncharted Realms
- Release Date
- Feb 24, 2022