Compare Eternum EX prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Radin Games. Published by Flynn's Arcade. Released on 10/25/2018. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Action, Indie.

An old knight, one walking cane, 25 levels of arcade-pure chest-hunting punishment. Eternum EX wears its 1980s cabinet DNA proudly and barely apologises for any of it.

I have a soft spot for the kind of game that could have shipped on a floppy disk in 1987 and nobody would have blinked. Eternum EX is exactly that: a hand-crafted love letter to a very specific corner of arcade history, built by a solo Spanish developer who grew up feeding coins into cabinets and never quite got over it. That origin story matters, because the game's entire design language flows from it rather than being retrofitted for nostalgia points. The loop is old-school simple and deliberately so. Each of the 25 stages tasks Sir Arthur, a geriatric knight hunting for magical orbs of eternal youth, with collecting every treasure chest on screen before a portal opens to the next level. Horizontal stages alternate with vertical tower climbs, those tall, thin gauntlets where a boss waits at the summit like a grim bouncer. One hit kills you. Lives are finite in Home Console mode (three continues, world-based saves), and infinite but progress-wiping in Arcade mode. The chest-hunting core is lifted directly from Baluba-louk no Densetsu, seasoned with the map aesthetic of Ghosts 'n Goblins and the kinetic energy of Bomb Jack. The developer name-drops all four inspirations on the game's own homepage and never tries to hide the lineage, which I respect enormously. Radin built something honest. What works is the feel of each world having its own soundtrack cue and visual palette, the way chests can be bumped from below to inflate their value (at the cost of precious timer seconds), and the pre-placed lightning orbs that temporarily convert Arthur's walking-cane swipe into a fireball. That single offensive power-up is the closest the game gets to tactical depth, and it creates genuine small decisions: grab the orb now before entering the boss room, or save it? The pixel art sits somewhere between the 8-bit and 16-bit generations, sprite animations are charming, and Arthur himself has a wonderful rickety energy when he leaps and swings. The per-world boss encounters, a feature absent from the original free Eternum release, give the tower climbs a proper punctuation mark. The friction, and it is real friction, comes from input timing. Some reviewers and players have flagged a slight delay between pressing jump or attack and the action landing, which in a one-hit-kill arcade game is the difference between a clean run and a death that feels stolen rather than earned. It is not universally crippling but it is there, and you should know going in that the game's difficulty is partly from enemy placement and partly from learning to fire your inputs slightly earlier than instinct suggests. The level design also grows repetitive across the horizontal stages; the visual themes shift between worlds but the underlying structure stays the same, and by world three the chest-hunt formula loses some freshness. At roughly 90 minutes to complete, the game ends before the repetition becomes a serious grievance, which is exactly the right call. This is arcade design: short, sharp, meant to be replayed for score. Eternum EX is a modest game that knows precisely what it is. It will not convert anyone who has never found joy in old cabinet games, and it does not try to. For players who already feel the pull of that era, though, there is something genuinely heartening about a one-person indie project that treats Bomb Jack and Psychic 5 as worthy ancestors rather than ironic references. The craftsmanship is real, the ambition is appropriately scaled, and the 25 stages go down fast enough that the rougher edges never fully derail the experience. Kai, Scout Team

Eternum EX
ActionIndie

Eternum EX

Oct 25, 2018Radin GamesFlynn's Arcade
GamerScout Says

An old knight, one walking cane, 25 levels of arcade-pure chest-hunting punishment. Eternum EX wears its 1980s cabinet DNA proudly and barely apologises for any of it.

PCMacLinux
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Eternum EX

I have a soft spot for the kind of game that could have shipped on a floppy disk in 1987 and nobody would have blinked. Eternum EX is exactly that: a hand-crafted love letter to a very specific corner of arcade history, built by a solo Spanish developer who grew up feeding coins into cabinets and never quite got over it. That origin story matters, because the game's entire design language flows from it rather than being retrofitted for nostalgia points. The loop is old-school simple and deliberately so. Each of the 25 stages tasks Sir Arthur, a geriatric knight hunting for magical orbs of eternal youth, with collecting every treasure chest on screen before a portal opens to the next level. Horizontal stages alternate with vertical tower climbs, those tall, thin gauntlets where a boss waits at the summit like a grim bouncer. One hit kills you. Lives are finite in Home Console mode (three continues, world-based saves), and infinite but progress-wiping in Arcade mode. The chest-hunting core is lifted directly from Baluba-louk no Densetsu, seasoned with the map aesthetic of Ghosts 'n Goblins and the kinetic energy of Bomb Jack. The developer name-drops all four inspirations on the game's own homepage and never tries to hide the lineage, which I respect enormously. Radin built something honest. What works is the feel of each world having its own soundtrack cue and visual palette, the way chests can be bumped from below to inflate their value (at the cost of precious timer seconds), and the pre-placed lightning orbs that temporarily convert Arthur's walking-cane swipe into a fireball. That single offensive power-up is the closest the game gets to tactical depth, and it creates genuine small decisions: grab the orb now before entering the boss room, or save it? The pixel art sits somewhere between the 8-bit and 16-bit generations, sprite animations are charming, and Arthur himself has a wonderful rickety energy when he leaps and swings. The per-world boss encounters, a feature absent from the original free Eternum release, give the tower climbs a proper punctuation mark. The friction, and it is real friction, comes from input timing. Some reviewers and players have flagged a slight delay between pressing jump or attack and the action landing, which in a one-hit-kill arcade game is the difference between a clean run and a death that feels stolen rather than earned. It is not universally crippling but it is there, and you should know going in that the game's difficulty is partly from enemy placement and partly from learning to fire your inputs slightly earlier than instinct suggests. The level design also grows repetitive across the horizontal stages; the visual themes shift between worlds but the underlying structure stays the same, and by world three the chest-hunt formula loses some freshness. At roughly 90 minutes to complete, the game ends before the repetition becomes a serious grievance, which is exactly the right call. This is arcade design: short, sharp, meant to be replayed for score. Eternum EX is a modest game that knows precisely what it is. It will not convert anyone who has never found joy in old cabinet games, and it does not try to. For players who already feel the pull of that era, though, there is something genuinely heartening about a one-person indie project that treats Bomb Jack and Psychic 5 as worthy ancestors rather than ironic references. The craftsmanship is real, the ambition is appropriately scaled, and the 25 stages go down fast enough that the rougher edges never fully derail the experience. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttier:sub-5Arcade Cabinet-styleOne-Hit KillChest CollectionBoss ClimbsScore AttackArcade ModeHome Console ModePixel Art PlatformerTimer Pressure

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 and above
Memory
2 MB RAM
Storage
400 MB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GTX 470 de 1 GB/AMD HD 7870 de 2 GB
Processor
1.5 GHz Core2Duo

Recommended

OS
Microsoft Windows 8, 10
Memory
4 MB RAM
Storage
400 MB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GTX 780 de 3 GB/AMD R9 290 de 4 GB
Processor
Intel Core i3

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Eternum EX.

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Radin Games
Publisher
Flynn's Arcade
Release Date
Oct 25, 2018

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

Frequently asked questions about Eternum EX

Where can I buy Eternum EX cheapest?

Compare Eternum EX 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 Eternum EX available on?

Eternum EX is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was Eternum EX released?

Eternum EX was released on 25 October 2018.

Who developed Eternum EX?

Eternum EX was developed by Radin Games and published by Flynn's Arcade.