Compare Hands of Necromancy prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by HON Team. Published by Fulqrum Publishing. Released on 6/20/2022. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Action, Indie.

If Hexen ever had a worthy successor that nobody told you about, this is the one. A dark fantasy FPS that folds monster transformations and metroidvania exploration into the boomer-shooter formula with genuine craft.

I went in expecting a competent Heretic clone and came out having lost a weekend to it. Hands of Necromancy is the kind of small-team project that quietly does something the genre hasn't really tried before: it lets you transform into the enemies you fight, and uses those transformations as the actual progression backbone of the game. Become the Stone Breaker Golem to shatter cracked walls, slip through tight corridors as the Swamp Serpent, walk unharmed across lava as the Hell Burner Demon, or take to the air as the Wyvern. Each form is a key, and the world is built around that logic. It clicks in a way that Hexen's item-puzzle design never quite managed. The structure is three hub worlds, each feeding into a web of interconnected maps, all 21 of them, threaded together through portals that unlock as you find abilities and keys. The Kotaku reviewer clocked far more than the advertised seven hours on the first chapter alone, just chasing secrets, and that rings true. The level design has real verticality to it, with underground chambers, maze-like crypts, and sprawling outdoor spaces that reward slow, attentive play. The GZDoom engine handles the lighting beautifully for a 2.5D game, and the pixel art on the creature designs is genuinely lovely, particularly the bosses. The soundtrack, composed by Luke Jansen, sits in that same moodily atmospheric register Heretic fans will know well, the kind of dark ambient score that makes corridors feel like they are breathing. Where the game stumbles slightly is in its namesake mechanic. The actual necromancy, raising fallen enemies to fight for you, is delivered through a consumable item rather than a core loop. You can summon undead allies, but in the heat of busy combat it is easy to forget entirely, and the raised servants do not quite have the presence to change a fight meaningfully. Some players have noted the weapons can feel underpowered in the early game before you build up your roster of spells and transformations, and the hub-maze design drew complaints about getting lost, a tension the sequel apparently tried to resolve. These are real friction points, but they sit inside a game that otherwise understands pacing and discovery in a way that most boomer shooters do not. The team behind this is small, formed largely from veteran modders, and that shows in how intentional every weird corner of the design feels. Kotaku called it "a game so good it could have been Hexen III" and that is not hyperbole. Critics and community reviewers alike praised the magic system, the transformation mechanics, and the level craft. Steam user sentiment runs at 86 percent positive, which for a niche sub-five-dollar retro shooter is a strong signal. If you have already finished Ion Fury and Wrath: Aeon of Ruin and you are hunting for something with a bit more exploratory texture to it, Hands of Necromancy has that texture in abundance. Just accept that the necromancy is more of a vibe than a central system, and the rest will reward you. Kai, Scout Team

Hands of Necromancy
ActionIndie

Hands of Necromancy

Jun 20, 2022HON TeamFulqrum Publishing
GamerScout Says

If Hexen ever had a worthy successor that nobody told you about, this is the one. A dark fantasy FPS that folds monster transformations and metroidvania exploration into the boomer-shooter formula with genuine craft.

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About Hands of Necromancy

I went in expecting a competent Heretic clone and came out having lost a weekend to it. Hands of Necromancy is the kind of small-team project that quietly does something the genre hasn't really tried before: it lets you transform into the enemies you fight, and uses those transformations as the actual progression backbone of the game. Become the Stone Breaker Golem to shatter cracked walls, slip through tight corridors as the Swamp Serpent, walk unharmed across lava as the Hell Burner Demon, or take to the air as the Wyvern. Each form is a key, and the world is built around that logic. It clicks in a way that Hexen's item-puzzle design never quite managed. The structure is three hub worlds, each feeding into a web of interconnected maps, all 21 of them, threaded together through portals that unlock as you find abilities and keys. The Kotaku reviewer clocked far more than the advertised seven hours on the first chapter alone, just chasing secrets, and that rings true. The level design has real verticality to it, with underground chambers, maze-like crypts, and sprawling outdoor spaces that reward slow, attentive play. The GZDoom engine handles the lighting beautifully for a 2.5D game, and the pixel art on the creature designs is genuinely lovely, particularly the bosses. The soundtrack, composed by Luke Jansen, sits in that same moodily atmospheric register Heretic fans will know well, the kind of dark ambient score that makes corridors feel like they are breathing. Where the game stumbles slightly is in its namesake mechanic. The actual necromancy, raising fallen enemies to fight for you, is delivered through a consumable item rather than a core loop. You can summon undead allies, but in the heat of busy combat it is easy to forget entirely, and the raised servants do not quite have the presence to change a fight meaningfully. Some players have noted the weapons can feel underpowered in the early game before you build up your roster of spells and transformations, and the hub-maze design drew complaints about getting lost, a tension the sequel apparently tried to resolve. These are real friction points, but they sit inside a game that otherwise understands pacing and discovery in a way that most boomer shooters do not. The team behind this is small, formed largely from veteran modders, and that shows in how intentional every weird corner of the design feels. Kotaku called it "a game so good it could have been Hexen III" and that is not hyperbole. Critics and community reviewers alike praised the magic system, the transformation mechanics, and the level craft. Steam user sentiment runs at 86 percent positive, which for a niche sub-five-dollar retro shooter is a strong signal. If you have already finished Ion Fury and Wrath: Aeon of Ruin and you are hunting for something with a bit more exploratory texture to it, Hands of Necromancy has that texture in abundance. Just accept that the necromancy is more of a vibe than a central system, and the rest will reward you. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayercloud-savestier:sub-5Boomer ShooterHub-World ExplorationEnemy TransformationMetroidvania-FPS HybridGZDoomDark FantasySecret HuntingRetro Level Design

Steam Deck & Linux

ProtonDB Platinum

Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 5 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10
Memory
2048 MB RAM
Storage
400 MB available space
Graphics
OpenGL 4.2
Processor
64-bit Dual-Core with SSE2 support 2.4GHz+
Sound Card
Any with proper Windows drivers

Recommended

OS
Windows 11
Memory
8192 MB RAM
Storage
1024 MB available space
Graphics
Vulkan 1.2
Processor
64-bit Quad-Core with SSE2 Support 3.0GHz+
Sound Card
Any with proper Windows drivers

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Game Info

Developer
HON Team
Publisher
Fulqrum Publishing
Release Date
Jun 20, 2022

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What platforms is Hands of Necromancy available on?

Hands of Necromancy is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was Hands of Necromancy released?

Hands of Necromancy was released on 20 June 2022.

Who developed Hands of Necromancy?

Hands of Necromancy was developed by HON Team and published by Fulqrum Publishing.