Compare Masquerade: The Baubles of Doom prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Big Ant Studios. Published by Big Ant Studios. Released on 4/20/2016. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Casual, Indie.

Charming clown-bashing with a genuinely funny narrator and cartoon-Saturday-morning soul, undercut by floaty controls that remind you this is a budget effort.

My first honest reaction to Masquerade: The Baubles of Doom was a quiet delight - a jester named Jaxx, a kidnapped witch named Comedia, a villain called Big Nose, and an omniscient narrator who the game heavily implies is actual God tutoring you on mouse clicks mid-tutorial. That premise alone carries more personality than most mid-range titles bother to conjure. It is a small, weird, lovingly assembled thing, and for the right kind of player that counts for quite a lot. Structurally, this is a 3D brawler spread across eight acts, each opened by a hand-drawn animated short that lands somewhere between Saturday morning TV nostalgia and a budget Shrek knockoff - in the best possible way. Combat takes its cues from the Batman Arkham template: standard attacks, a counter triggered when a golden indicator floats above an enemy's head, a dodge, a hammer throw, and a super-move bar charged by collecting the red noses enemies drop on death. Defeated clowns yield noses, noses level up your super moves, and boss encounters at the end of each act require you to actually think about which of the three super move tiers to deploy. There is also a mask-swapping mechanic that shifts Jaxx between combat-focused, stealth, and puzzle-solving modes across levels, which is the most interesting system on paper. Whether it delivers in practice is a more complicated answer. The problems are real and consistent. Controls feel floaty across both combat and platforming - the kind of floaty where you misjudge a jump and genuinely cannot tell whether it was your fault or the engine's. Camera behavior in combat can obscure enemies entirely. A reported bug at launch could crash the game to desktop when no gamepad was connected, and a saving bug near the end of Act One wiped progress for some players. The collectibles, hidden baubles and treasure chests scattered through levels, are mechanically toothless - no meaningful reward for hunting them down means even the completionist crowd has little incentive. At roughly three to four hours on a clean run, there is not much padding, but there is also not much depth. The story bottoms out into a basic rescue plot when the Druid Orbs premise offered something more interesting. What holds it together is tone. The dialogue is genuinely funny in places - Jaxx's sarcasm, the fourth-wall-breaking narrator, the pop-art combat bubbles that flash "Whack!" and "Thud!" across the screen. The cel-shaded visuals borrow from Borderlands in broad strokes and carry their own warmth in the cutscene animation. Critics landed in the mid-range, finding it difficult to be fully negative about something so cheerfully self-aware, while also being unable to ignore how thin the moment-to-moment play feels after the first hour. The honest summary is that the comedy often outperforms the combat, and that gap grows more visible the longer you play. If you want a short, low-pressure brawler with a personality that punches above its technical weight, this does the job in an afternoon. If responsive platforming or tight combat is non-negotiable for you, manage expectations carefully before committing. Kai, Scout Team

Masquerade: The Baubles of Doom
ActionAdventureCasualIndie

Masquerade: The Baubles of Doom

Apr 20, 2016Big Ant Studios
GamerScout Says

Charming clown-bashing with a genuinely funny narrator and cartoon-Saturday-morning soul, undercut by floaty controls that remind you this is a budget effort.

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About Masquerade: The Baubles of Doom

My first honest reaction to Masquerade: The Baubles of Doom was a quiet delight - a jester named Jaxx, a kidnapped witch named Comedia, a villain called Big Nose, and an omniscient narrator who the game heavily implies is actual God tutoring you on mouse clicks mid-tutorial. That premise alone carries more personality than most mid-range titles bother to conjure. It is a small, weird, lovingly assembled thing, and for the right kind of player that counts for quite a lot. Structurally, this is a 3D brawler spread across eight acts, each opened by a hand-drawn animated short that lands somewhere between Saturday morning TV nostalgia and a budget Shrek knockoff - in the best possible way. Combat takes its cues from the Batman Arkham template: standard attacks, a counter triggered when a golden indicator floats above an enemy's head, a dodge, a hammer throw, and a super-move bar charged by collecting the red noses enemies drop on death. Defeated clowns yield noses, noses level up your super moves, and boss encounters at the end of each act require you to actually think about which of the three super move tiers to deploy. There is also a mask-swapping mechanic that shifts Jaxx between combat-focused, stealth, and puzzle-solving modes across levels, which is the most interesting system on paper. Whether it delivers in practice is a more complicated answer. The problems are real and consistent. Controls feel floaty across both combat and platforming - the kind of floaty where you misjudge a jump and genuinely cannot tell whether it was your fault or the engine's. Camera behavior in combat can obscure enemies entirely. A reported bug at launch could crash the game to desktop when no gamepad was connected, and a saving bug near the end of Act One wiped progress for some players. The collectibles, hidden baubles and treasure chests scattered through levels, are mechanically toothless - no meaningful reward for hunting them down means even the completionist crowd has little incentive. At roughly three to four hours on a clean run, there is not much padding, but there is also not much depth. The story bottoms out into a basic rescue plot when the Druid Orbs premise offered something more interesting. What holds it together is tone. The dialogue is genuinely funny in places - Jaxx's sarcasm, the fourth-wall-breaking narrator, the pop-art combat bubbles that flash "Whack!" and "Thud!" across the screen. The cel-shaded visuals borrow from Borderlands in broad strokes and carry their own warmth in the cutscene animation. Critics landed in the mid-range, finding it difficult to be fully negative about something so cheerfully self-aware, while also being unable to ignore how thin the moment-to-moment play feels after the first hour. The honest summary is that the comedy often outperforms the combat, and that gap grows more visible the longer you play. If you want a short, low-pressure brawler with a personality that punches above its technical weight, this does the job in an afternoon. If responsive platforming or tight combat is non-negotiable for you, manage expectations carefully before committing. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-53D BrawlerComic Book Art StyleSaturday Morning ToneFourth-Wall HumorMask MechanicsShort CampaignBudget ReleaseBoss Fights

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Silver

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified. Playable on Linux with some workarounds. Based on 6 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP/Windows Vista/Windows 7/Windows 8
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
5 GB available space
Graphics
Radeon HD 6670 or NVIDIA Geforce GT530 with Min 1GB Memory
Processor
Pentium Dual-Core CPU E5700 @ 3.00Ghz/AMD Athlon II X2 250 Processor 3.01Ghz

Recommended

OS
Windows XP/Windows Vista/Windows 7/Windows 8
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
5 GB available space
Graphics
Radeon HD 7790 or NVIDIA GeForce GTX 650 with Min 2GB memory
Processor
Intel CoreTM I3-3210 CPU @ 3.20Ghz (4 Cpus) /AMD Phenom II X4 960T 3.0Ghz

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Game Info

Developer
Big Ant Studios
Publisher
Big Ant Studios
Release Date
Apr 20, 2016

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Masquerade: The Baubles of Doom is available on PC.

When was Masquerade: The Baubles of Doom released?

Masquerade: The Baubles of Doom was released on 20 April 2016.

Who developed Masquerade: The Baubles of Doom?

Masquerade: The Baubles of Doom was developed by Big Ant Studios.