
Hammer 2
A Unity asset flip dressed up as a budget GTA clone - 30 missions, a slow-motion gimmick, and a review history that has raised serious community red flags.
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About Hammer 2
My honest reaction after digging into Hammer 2 is one of mild sadness rather than outright anger, because buried under the murk there is a legible game loop that could have been something. You play as The Hammer, a hitman tasked with clearing a low-poly city of criminals across roughly 30 missions. Follow the minimap, locate targets, eliminate them or destroy specific objects, collect cash, unlock gadgets, repeat. The core structure is workable. The Hammer Time mechanic - a bullet-time slow-down triggered by a single keypress - is a genuinely useful idea that lets you line up shots or escape when outnumbered. Vehicles ranging from cars to tanks are drivable and change the tempo of individual missions. There is even a shop where mission earnings convert into weapon upgrades. On paper, that is a functional arcade shooter skeleton. In practice, the skeleton was not built here. Community investigators have documented at length that this title is a redistributed Unity Asset Store package called Full Game Kit - Hammer 2, originally produced by XForm Games. RewindApp repackaged it and put it on Steam. The same base code has reportedly appeared under multiple different storefronts and publisher names. That matters to me, not for moral reasons alone, but because it explains the design ceiling: the city geometry feels like a development template, enemy behavior is rudimentary, and the mission variety is thin enough that repetition sets in fast. Nothing in the experience suggests authorial intent or craft, which is usually the thing I am here to find. The review picture on Steam is murky too. A vocal portion of the Steam community has flagged that the positive reviews associated with RewindApp titles follow suspicious patterns - clustered posting windows, foreign-language accounts - and the platform's own review scoring for this specific listing is essentially inert. Whatever the 90-percent-positive figure on some store pages reflects, it does not appear to represent an honest cross-section of players who sat down and finished the campaign. Who is this actually for, then? Someone who genuinely wants a throwaway ten-minute session of third-person shooting, understands what they are buying, and has no expectation of craft or longevity might extract a shrug of mild amusement from it. The vehicle controls are loose in a way that can be accidentally fun. Hammer Time works. But if you are hoping for a scrappy indie that punches above its weight, this is not that. There are dozens of real one-person projects on Steam right now, made with actual creative intent, that cost the same or less and deserve the attention far more. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7/8/10 - 64bits
- Memory
- 2 GB RAM
- Storage
- 150 MB available space
- Graphics
- Intel HD Graphique
- Processor
- 2 GHz Intel Pentium 4 or AMD Athlon or equivalent
- Sound Card
- All
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Game Info
- Developer
- RewindApp
- Publisher
- RewindApp
- Release Date
- Oct 30, 2017






