Compare Fatal Claw prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by NDEV GAMES. Published by Com2us Holdings. Released on 11/18/2025. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie, Early Access.

Speed-first Metroidvania with a hand-drawn anthropomorphic world that earns its 96% Steam rating, though its progression systems are still being hammered into shape in Early Access.

I keep a short list of Early Access games I actually trust, and Fatal Claw just made it onto that list, cautiously, but genuinely. NDEV GAMES built something with unmistakable personality here: a dark underground world populated by anthropomorphic nobles, soldiers, and engineers, all orbiting one very fast black-cat protagonist named Kisha, who was apparently resurrected from death before the game even starts. That premise alone has more texture than most metroidvania pitches, and the art direction commits to it with confidence. The movement is the game's clearest strength. Kisha starts fleet and only gets faster as you unlock abilities like the dash, wall jump, and glide. Enemy encounters lean into that speed, too, with infected creatures that dart and leap in ways that demand real-time reaction rather than methodical positioning. There is a roll for slipping under tight gaps, though it sits underutilized in the current build. The bigger loop involves absorbing Engraved Skills from defeated enemies and customizing Kisha's loadout through a magic stone system called Cabitz, which adds some welcome flexibility to how you approach fights. Whether that flexibility grows into genuine build variety by full release is the open question. The world itself is the other strong card. The underground realm feels genuinely lore-rich, scattered with sealed passages and architectural mysteries. Community players have flagged that the story is somewhat foggy right now, which tracks for Early Access content focused on early regions, but the visual world-building carries the atmosphere even where the narrative is thin. The Kickstarter-funded origins show in the handcrafted quality of the environments rather than any feeling of scrappiness. Two expansion updates have already landed since launch, adding regions like Lower Elord Castle, Jayma's Dungeon, and the Kannir Belt, with a third in preview. The developer's update cadence and transparency on Discord read as a team that takes the feedback loop seriously. What needs work? Progression pacing is the honest answer. The unlock curve can feel grindy before momentum builds, and difficulty scaling gets uneven in spots. These are Early Access problems, not design failures, but they are real enough that players who need a tight, finished experience should park this on their wishlist and return closer to 1.0. For those who find joy in watching a small studio actively refine something clearly worth refining, the current build already offers ten or more hours of atmospheric side-scrolling with movement that genuinely feels good to inhabit. Kai, Scout Team

Fatal Claw
ActionAdventureIndieEarly Access

Fatal Claw

Nov 18, 2025NDEV GAMESCom2us Holdings
GamerScout Says

Speed-first Metroidvania with a hand-drawn anthropomorphic world that earns its 96% Steam rating, though its progression systems are still being hammered into shape in Early Access.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Fatal Claw

I keep a short list of Early Access games I actually trust, and Fatal Claw just made it onto that list, cautiously, but genuinely. NDEV GAMES built something with unmistakable personality here: a dark underground world populated by anthropomorphic nobles, soldiers, and engineers, all orbiting one very fast black-cat protagonist named Kisha, who was apparently resurrected from death before the game even starts. That premise alone has more texture than most metroidvania pitches, and the art direction commits to it with confidence. The movement is the game's clearest strength. Kisha starts fleet and only gets faster as you unlock abilities like the dash, wall jump, and glide. Enemy encounters lean into that speed, too, with infected creatures that dart and leap in ways that demand real-time reaction rather than methodical positioning. There is a roll for slipping under tight gaps, though it sits underutilized in the current build. The bigger loop involves absorbing Engraved Skills from defeated enemies and customizing Kisha's loadout through a magic stone system called Cabitz, which adds some welcome flexibility to how you approach fights. Whether that flexibility grows into genuine build variety by full release is the open question. The world itself is the other strong card. The underground realm feels genuinely lore-rich, scattered with sealed passages and architectural mysteries. Community players have flagged that the story is somewhat foggy right now, which tracks for Early Access content focused on early regions, but the visual world-building carries the atmosphere even where the narrative is thin. The Kickstarter-funded origins show in the handcrafted quality of the environments rather than any feeling of scrappiness. Two expansion updates have already landed since launch, adding regions like Lower Elord Castle, Jayma's Dungeon, and the Kannir Belt, with a third in preview. The developer's update cadence and transparency on Discord read as a team that takes the feedback loop seriously. What needs work? Progression pacing is the honest answer. The unlock curve can feel grindy before momentum builds, and difficulty scaling gets uneven in spots. These are Early Access problems, not design failures, but they are real enough that players who need a tight, finished experience should park this on their wishlist and return closer to 1.0. For those who find joy in watching a small studio actively refine something clearly worth refining, the current build already offers ten or more hours of atmospheric side-scrolling with movement that genuinely feels good to inhabit. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayercontroller-supporttier:indieFast MetroidvaniaAbility AbsorptionCabitz CustomizationAnthropomorphic WorldKickstarter-FundedSteam Deck VerifiedExpansion RoadmapLore-Scattered World

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 (64bit)
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 10
Storage
3 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce 9800 GTX+ (1GB)
Processor
Intel Core 2 Duo E5200

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 (64bit)
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
3 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 560
Processor
Intel Core i5

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
NDEV GAMES
Publisher
Com2us Holdings
Release Date
Nov 18, 2025

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