Compare Lost Bros prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Wheat Muffin Games. Published by Wheat Muffin Games. Released on 2/25/2016. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie.

Controlling three pixel-art heroes simultaneously through time-cracking puzzles is a genuinely odd idea that mostly works, though patience for trial-and-error is the real entry fee here.

I have a soft spot for the kind of game that announces its entire thesis in the first thirty seconds of play, and Lost Bros does exactly that: three characters, one keyboard (or a controller, which is heavily recommended), and a puzzle that immediately refuses to move until all three of them cooperate. Gunman, Shieldman, and Swordman each bring a distinct function to every encounter. Gunman handles ranged threats and pressures switches from a distance, Shieldman absorbs damage and blocks passage for enemies, and Swordman closes in for close-quarters work. Getting the three of them through a room without losing one feels, at its best, like conducting a tiny orchestra. The concept is openly indebted to Blizzard's The Lost Vikings, and Wheat Muffin Games does not hide that lineage. The time-travel framing spans nine distinct periods that can be tackled in a non-linear order, which is a bolder structural choice than most one-person studios would risk. Each era shifts the visual palette and introduces a new set of enemies and boss fights. The pixel art is modest but purposeful, and the 21 original audio tracks give the whole thing a handmade warmth that budget-tier games often skip entirely. There is real craft in the sound design here, the kind where you notice the music has been written specifically for the space rather than licensed in from a royalty-free library. That said, the game is genuinely difficult in a way that leans on repetition more than revelation. The developer flags it openly: the trial-and-error difficulty can test patience, and that is not false advertising. Death comes fast, checkpoint spacing is unforgiving in spots, and coordinating three characters at once on a keyboard is a specific skill that the game offers almost no tutorialisation for. A controller smooths this out considerably. There are alternate game modes built around exploring the three-characters-as-one mechanic, and speed run leaderboards separated by normal and hard difficulty for players who want a competitive frame around the chaos. Who is this for? Players who remember The Lost Vikings fondly and want something in that lineage, built with indie grit rather than studio polish. Players who treat a hard puzzle as a puzzle rather than a design failure. It is a short game by any measure, and it knows it. The boss battles give the pacing something to push against, and the non-linear time period structure means you can sidestep a wall and come back to it. If you are looking for a held-hand experience with generous saves and difficulty options, Lost Bros is not your game. If you respect the idea of one person building something genuinely strange and mechanically coherent on a micro budget, there is a small but real reward here for the right kind of patient player. Kai, Scout Team

Lost Bros
ActionAdventureIndie

Lost Bros

Feb 25, 2016Wheat Muffin Games
GamerScout Says

Controlling three pixel-art heroes simultaneously through time-cracking puzzles is a genuinely odd idea that mostly works, though patience for trial-and-error is the real entry fee here.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Lost Bros

I have a soft spot for the kind of game that announces its entire thesis in the first thirty seconds of play, and Lost Bros does exactly that: three characters, one keyboard (or a controller, which is heavily recommended), and a puzzle that immediately refuses to move until all three of them cooperate. Gunman, Shieldman, and Swordman each bring a distinct function to every encounter. Gunman handles ranged threats and pressures switches from a distance, Shieldman absorbs damage and blocks passage for enemies, and Swordman closes in for close-quarters work. Getting the three of them through a room without losing one feels, at its best, like conducting a tiny orchestra. The concept is openly indebted to Blizzard's The Lost Vikings, and Wheat Muffin Games does not hide that lineage. The time-travel framing spans nine distinct periods that can be tackled in a non-linear order, which is a bolder structural choice than most one-person studios would risk. Each era shifts the visual palette and introduces a new set of enemies and boss fights. The pixel art is modest but purposeful, and the 21 original audio tracks give the whole thing a handmade warmth that budget-tier games often skip entirely. There is real craft in the sound design here, the kind where you notice the music has been written specifically for the space rather than licensed in from a royalty-free library. That said, the game is genuinely difficult in a way that leans on repetition more than revelation. The developer flags it openly: the trial-and-error difficulty can test patience, and that is not false advertising. Death comes fast, checkpoint spacing is unforgiving in spots, and coordinating three characters at once on a keyboard is a specific skill that the game offers almost no tutorialisation for. A controller smooths this out considerably. There are alternate game modes built around exploring the three-characters-as-one mechanic, and speed run leaderboards separated by normal and hard difficulty for players who want a competitive frame around the chaos. Who is this for? Players who remember The Lost Vikings fondly and want something in that lineage, built with indie grit rather than studio polish. Players who treat a hard puzzle as a puzzle rather than a design failure. It is a short game by any measure, and it knows it. The boss battles give the pacing something to push against, and the non-linear time period structure means you can sidestep a wall and come back to it. If you are looking for a held-hand experience with generous saves and difficulty options, Lost Bros is not your game. If you respect the idea of one person building something genuinely strange and mechanically coherent on a micro budget, there is a small but real reward here for the right kind of patient player. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardstier:sub-5The Lost Vikings-likeMulti-Character ControlTrial-and-ErrorNon-Linear Level OrderBoss BattlesPixel ArtSpeedrun LeaderboardsController RecommendedTime Travel

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP or Higher
Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
Anything made post 2004 should work
Processor
1.5 GHZ or higher
Additional Notes
Xbox360 Controller support

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Game Info

Developer
Wheat Muffin Games
Publisher
Wheat Muffin Games
Release Date
Feb 25, 2016

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Where can I buy Lost Bros cheapest?

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What platforms is Lost Bros available on?

Lost Bros is available on PC.

When was Lost Bros released?

Lost Bros was released on 25 February 2016.

Who developed Lost Bros?

Lost Bros was developed by Wheat Muffin Games.