Compare Flat Kingdom Paper's Cut Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Fat Panda Games. Published by Games Starter. Released on 4/15/2016. Available on PC, Mac. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie.

Papercraft charm and a rock-paper-scissors combat hook make this a sweet little platformer, but uneven level design and slow pacing will test your patience before the good boss fights show up.

I have a soft spot for debut games that swing for a genuinely original idea, and Flat Kingdom: Paper's Cut Edition swings hard. Fat Panda Games, a small studio out of Merida, Mexico, built their entire first release around a single elegant conceit: your hero Flat can shift between circle, triangle, and square on the fly, and every combat encounter, puzzle, and platforming section asks you to pick the right form at the right moment. Circle double-jumps and handles like a sports car. Triangle sprints but leaps like it has lead boots. Square bulldozes blocks and sinks to the seafloor, but asking it to clear a ledge is an exercise in patience. The shape-switching itself is fast and intuitive, and mid-air transformations feel genuinely clever once the game starts stacking environmental puzzles on top of combat reads. The visual presentation is where the game earns its name. Levels are constructed like little paper dioramas, with cut-out shapes layered to create surprising depth for a 2D world. Castle zones, lava fields, underwater Flatlantis, icy wastes, each area arrives dressed in bright, scissor-cut scenery that holds up nicely. There are nods to Norse and Greek mythology tucked into enemy designs, hidden scrolls that flesh out the kingdom's lore, and coins scattered into off-path corners that reward thorough players with health upgrades. The composer behind the soundtrack is Manami Matsumae, whose credits include the original Mega Man and Shovel Knight, and her contribution gives the game a pedigree its modest scope would otherwise not suggest. Here is where I have to be straight with you: the gap between the game's best ideas and their execution is real. Standard enemy combat runs on a pure rock-paper-scissors logic (square beats triangle, triangle beats circle, circle beats square) that never grows much more complex than memorizing the chart, and a permanent reminder diagram can be pinned to the screen if even that proves slippery. The result is that routine encounters feel mechanical rather than satisfying. Jumping controls are frequently criticised across reviews, with the double-jump timing demanding a precision that the game's breezy visual tone does not prepare you for. Pacing across the six worlds can drag, particularly in the mid-game stretches before the combat abilities start unlocking and adding texture. Some boss encounters lean hard into trial-and-error, which sits awkwardly against an otherwise relaxed difficulty curve. The 100% completion path, which gates a secret ending, requires replaying the final boss in a way that feels more like busywork than reward. That said, the boss fights at their best are the highlight of the whole run. Using triangle speed to dodge projectiles, switching to square mid-air to drive a piston, then flipping to circle to reach a high platform is exactly the kind of multi-shape choreography the game is capable of and clearly wants to be. When it clicks, Flat Kingdom feels like a small game that found its groove. Steam sits at a modest "Mostly Positive" rating from a small review pool, and critics across the board land somewhere around a shrug-with-affection, appreciating the concept while wishing the execution had been tightened. This is a game for players who value handcrafted visual worlds and are willing to meet a debut studio where it is, rough edges and all. Completionists, achievement hunters, and anyone who wants a low-stakes afternoon platformer with a distinctive look will find enough here to justify the time. Players who need tight controls and consistent challenge will bounce off it early. Kai, Scout Team

Flat Kingdom Paper's Cut Edition
ActionAdventureIndie

Flat Kingdom Paper's Cut Edition

Apr 15, 2016Fat Panda GamesGames Starter
GamerScout Says

Papercraft charm and a rock-paper-scissors combat hook make this a sweet little platformer, but uneven level design and slow pacing will test your patience before the good boss fights show up.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Flat Kingdom Paper's Cut Edition

I have a soft spot for debut games that swing for a genuinely original idea, and Flat Kingdom: Paper's Cut Edition swings hard. Fat Panda Games, a small studio out of Merida, Mexico, built their entire first release around a single elegant conceit: your hero Flat can shift between circle, triangle, and square on the fly, and every combat encounter, puzzle, and platforming section asks you to pick the right form at the right moment. Circle double-jumps and handles like a sports car. Triangle sprints but leaps like it has lead boots. Square bulldozes blocks and sinks to the seafloor, but asking it to clear a ledge is an exercise in patience. The shape-switching itself is fast and intuitive, and mid-air transformations feel genuinely clever once the game starts stacking environmental puzzles on top of combat reads. The visual presentation is where the game earns its name. Levels are constructed like little paper dioramas, with cut-out shapes layered to create surprising depth for a 2D world. Castle zones, lava fields, underwater Flatlantis, icy wastes, each area arrives dressed in bright, scissor-cut scenery that holds up nicely. There are nods to Norse and Greek mythology tucked into enemy designs, hidden scrolls that flesh out the kingdom's lore, and coins scattered into off-path corners that reward thorough players with health upgrades. The composer behind the soundtrack is Manami Matsumae, whose credits include the original Mega Man and Shovel Knight, and her contribution gives the game a pedigree its modest scope would otherwise not suggest. Here is where I have to be straight with you: the gap between the game's best ideas and their execution is real. Standard enemy combat runs on a pure rock-paper-scissors logic (square beats triangle, triangle beats circle, circle beats square) that never grows much more complex than memorizing the chart, and a permanent reminder diagram can be pinned to the screen if even that proves slippery. The result is that routine encounters feel mechanical rather than satisfying. Jumping controls are frequently criticised across reviews, with the double-jump timing demanding a precision that the game's breezy visual tone does not prepare you for. Pacing across the six worlds can drag, particularly in the mid-game stretches before the combat abilities start unlocking and adding texture. Some boss encounters lean hard into trial-and-error, which sits awkwardly against an otherwise relaxed difficulty curve. The 100% completion path, which gates a secret ending, requires replaying the final boss in a way that feels more like busywork than reward. That said, the boss fights at their best are the highlight of the whole run. Using triangle speed to dodge projectiles, switching to square mid-air to drive a piston, then flipping to circle to reach a high platform is exactly the kind of multi-shape choreography the game is capable of and clearly wants to be. When it clicks, Flat Kingdom feels like a small game that found its groove. Steam sits at a modest "Mostly Positive" rating from a small review pool, and critics across the board land somewhere around a shrug-with-affection, appreciating the concept while wishing the execution had been tightened. This is a game for players who value handcrafted visual worlds and are willing to meet a debut studio where it is, rough edges and all. Completionists, achievement hunters, and anyone who wants a low-stakes afternoon platformer with a distinctive look will find enough here to justify the time. Players who need tight controls and consistent challenge will bounce off it early. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Papercraft Art StyleShape-Shifting MechanicsPuzzle-PlatformerBoss FightsCollectiblesHidden SecretsFamily-FriendlyShort PlaytimeMetroidvania-lite

Steam Deck & Linux

ProtonDB Gold

Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 7 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7
Memory
4 GB RAM
Storage
4 GB available space
Graphics
512 MB
Processor
2.00GHz or faster x86-compatible

Recommended

OS
Windows 7
Memory
6 GB RAM
Storage
4 GB available space
Graphics
1024 MB
Processor
3.00GHz

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
Fat Panda Games
Publisher
Games Starter
Release Date
Apr 15, 2016

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What platforms is Flat Kingdom Paper's Cut Edition available on?

Flat Kingdom Paper's Cut Edition is available on PC, Mac.

When was Flat Kingdom Paper's Cut Edition released?

Flat Kingdom Paper's Cut Edition was released on 15 April 2016.

Who developed Flat Kingdom Paper's Cut Edition?

Flat Kingdom Paper's Cut Edition was developed by Fat Panda Games and published by Games Starter.