Compare Kraken Odyssey prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Honikou Games. Published by Maximum Entertainment. Released on 11/29/2023. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Casual, Indie.

Cute, colourful, and honest about what it is: a breezy 3D auto-runner platformer for young or low-stakes players, with just enough per-level medal chasing to justify a second lap.

My honest first impression of Kraken Odyssey was relief, of all things. Relief that Honikou Games did not oversell it. This is a small, cheerful 3D action-runner built around guiding Voulpy, a wide-eyed little kraken, through more than thirty levels spread across beaches, jungles, snowy mountains, and flaming dungeons. You run, you jump, you dodge. The loop is that simple, and for the first hour or so, it is genuinely pleasant. The colourful biomes feel considered, the cartoon visual style has real warmth, and the soundtrack sits in that breezy, slightly tropical register that matches the world's almost childlike spirit. For a tiny indie studio, the craft in the art direction is easy to appreciate. The per-level structure gives the game its modest replayability. Each of the thirty-plus stages carries its own set of missions and medals, things like pacifist runs, coin collection quotas, and crate destruction counts. On paper that layering is a good idea, and it works early on. The problem is that the challenge tracking has bugs. Players on Steam have flagged that the challenge counters can mismatch with what actually happens in a level, so a pacifist medal can disappear because Voulpy clipped an enemy while jumping nearby, and kill counts can trigger prematurely or not at all. That is not a cosmetic flaw: it breaks the core reason to replay a stage. The sound design is similarly underbaked, with a noticeable shortage of moment-to-moment sound effects that makes interactions feel a little hollow. The level design itself starts strong and becomes less reliable in the back half of the game. The opening biomes feel well-paced and forgiving, smart for a game clearly targeting families and younger players. But as the worlds shift to mountains and dungeons, the layouts reportedly grow less intuitive without a matching increase in mechanical depth to justify the friction. It feels like a game that ran out of design budget before it ran out of levels. The costume unlock system, ranging from a pirate get-up to a full unicorn skin, adds a thin layer of collectible reward that younger players will likely enjoy, and controller support makes the whole thing feel natural in the hands. Who is Kraken Odyssey actually for? Honestly, kids under ten and adults looking for a low-commitment wind-down session. It carries an Everyone rating, runs on modest hardware, and asks nothing demanding from its player. The world has charm, Voulpy as a protagonist is hard to dislike, and there is something quietly sweet about a rescue story this uncomplicated. But if you are chasing a satisfying completion run with clean medal unlocks, the bugs will frustrate you faster than the platforming ever will. At its current state, it is a game with more heart than execution, and the near-total absence of community discussion on Steam suggests it never found the audience it deserved. Kai, Scout Team

Kraken Odyssey
ActionCasualIndie

Kraken Odyssey

Nov 29, 2023Honikou GamesMaximum Entertainment
GamerScout Says

Cute, colourful, and honest about what it is: a breezy 3D auto-runner platformer for young or low-stakes players, with just enough per-level medal chasing to justify a second lap.

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Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Kraken Odyssey

My honest first impression of Kraken Odyssey was relief, of all things. Relief that Honikou Games did not oversell it. This is a small, cheerful 3D action-runner built around guiding Voulpy, a wide-eyed little kraken, through more than thirty levels spread across beaches, jungles, snowy mountains, and flaming dungeons. You run, you jump, you dodge. The loop is that simple, and for the first hour or so, it is genuinely pleasant. The colourful biomes feel considered, the cartoon visual style has real warmth, and the soundtrack sits in that breezy, slightly tropical register that matches the world's almost childlike spirit. For a tiny indie studio, the craft in the art direction is easy to appreciate. The per-level structure gives the game its modest replayability. Each of the thirty-plus stages carries its own set of missions and medals, things like pacifist runs, coin collection quotas, and crate destruction counts. On paper that layering is a good idea, and it works early on. The problem is that the challenge tracking has bugs. Players on Steam have flagged that the challenge counters can mismatch with what actually happens in a level, so a pacifist medal can disappear because Voulpy clipped an enemy while jumping nearby, and kill counts can trigger prematurely or not at all. That is not a cosmetic flaw: it breaks the core reason to replay a stage. The sound design is similarly underbaked, with a noticeable shortage of moment-to-moment sound effects that makes interactions feel a little hollow. The level design itself starts strong and becomes less reliable in the back half of the game. The opening biomes feel well-paced and forgiving, smart for a game clearly targeting families and younger players. But as the worlds shift to mountains and dungeons, the layouts reportedly grow less intuitive without a matching increase in mechanical depth to justify the friction. It feels like a game that ran out of design budget before it ran out of levels. The costume unlock system, ranging from a pirate get-up to a full unicorn skin, adds a thin layer of collectible reward that younger players will likely enjoy, and controller support makes the whole thing feel natural in the hands. Who is Kraken Odyssey actually for? Honestly, kids under ten and adults looking for a low-commitment wind-down session. It carries an Everyone rating, runs on modest hardware, and asks nothing demanding from its player. The world has charm, Voulpy as a protagonist is hard to dislike, and there is something quietly sweet about a rescue story this uncomplicated. But if you are chasing a satisfying completion run with clean medal unlocks, the bugs will frustrate you faster than the platforming ever will. At its current state, it is a game with more heart than execution, and the near-total absence of community discussion on Steam suggests it never found the audience it deserved. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttier:sub-53D Auto-RunnerMedal ChallengesFamily Friendly PlatformerCostume UnlocksBug-ProneLow System RequirementsKid-FriendlyThird-Person Runner

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7/8/10
DirectX
Version 11
Graphics
Nvidia GTX 660 or better
Processor
i3 or better

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Honikou Games
Publisher
Maximum Entertainment
Release Date
Nov 29, 2023

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