Compare Purple Heart prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Artalasky. Published by Artalasky. Released on 11/27/2017. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Indie.

Fewer than half the people who started Purple Heart finished even a handful of its 16 levels. That number tells you everything about who this side-scroller is for and who should walk away.

I want to be honest with you: Purple Heart is a hard game to love without a specific kind of patience. Artalasky built a solo side-scrolling platformer around a premise that feels lifted from a retro fever dream. Nature and machines have turned against humanity, the world is collapsing under the weight of its own broken harmony, and somewhere in the dangerous tunnels of oblivion, an unnamed protagonist has to hold all of it together. The story is thin, told through atmosphere rather than cutscenes or dialogue, and if you are hoping for narrative warmth, you will have to find it in the pixel art itself. The structure is level-based, spanning at least 16 stages that demand you blend quick reflexes with light puzzle logic at the same time. You will push boxes, find a gun, find a machine gun, meet robots, and then die. Often. The achievement list doubles as an A-to-Z alphabet of progress checkpoints, which is a charming low-budget touch that gave me a genuine smile the first time I scrolled through it. Each completed level lights up a letter, and there is something almost handmade and earnest about that design choice. The 8-bit soundtrack by HateBit is energetic rather than atmospheric, meant to keep your pulse up during the harder stretches rather than immerse you in the world. Where Purple Heart struggles is in the gap between ambition and execution. The Steam community reception sits around the mixed mark, which feels accurate. The difficulty curve can spike in ways that read less like intentional challenge and more like unpolished collision or timing windows that were not fully tested. Players who bounced off it early likely hit a wall that felt arbitrary rather than fair. The pixel art style is genuine and has real personality in its environmental details, but the moment-to-moment feel of the platforming does not always match the visual care on display. It has the bones of a passion project but not quite the polish of a finished one. Who is this for, then. Hardcore platformer collectors who specifically enjoy short, punishing indie gauntlets with retro aesthetics and a completionist achievement hook will find something worth respecting here. If you finished VVVVVV with a smile, or if you have a folder of obscure Steam platformers that nobody else talks about, Purple Heart fits that shelf. It is not built for the casual afternoon. It is built for the player who considers dying 30 times on a single screen a reasonable Tuesday. Kai, Scout Team

Purple Heart
AdventureIndie

Purple Heart

Nov 27, 2017Artalasky
GamerScout Says

Fewer than half the people who started Purple Heart finished even a handful of its 16 levels. That number tells you everything about who this side-scroller is for and who should walk away.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Purple Heart

I want to be honest with you: Purple Heart is a hard game to love without a specific kind of patience. Artalasky built a solo side-scrolling platformer around a premise that feels lifted from a retro fever dream. Nature and machines have turned against humanity, the world is collapsing under the weight of its own broken harmony, and somewhere in the dangerous tunnels of oblivion, an unnamed protagonist has to hold all of it together. The story is thin, told through atmosphere rather than cutscenes or dialogue, and if you are hoping for narrative warmth, you will have to find it in the pixel art itself. The structure is level-based, spanning at least 16 stages that demand you blend quick reflexes with light puzzle logic at the same time. You will push boxes, find a gun, find a machine gun, meet robots, and then die. Often. The achievement list doubles as an A-to-Z alphabet of progress checkpoints, which is a charming low-budget touch that gave me a genuine smile the first time I scrolled through it. Each completed level lights up a letter, and there is something almost handmade and earnest about that design choice. The 8-bit soundtrack by HateBit is energetic rather than atmospheric, meant to keep your pulse up during the harder stretches rather than immerse you in the world. Where Purple Heart struggles is in the gap between ambition and execution. The Steam community reception sits around the mixed mark, which feels accurate. The difficulty curve can spike in ways that read less like intentional challenge and more like unpolished collision or timing windows that were not fully tested. Players who bounced off it early likely hit a wall that felt arbitrary rather than fair. The pixel art style is genuine and has real personality in its environmental details, but the moment-to-moment feel of the platforming does not always match the visual care on display. It has the bones of a passion project but not quite the polish of a finished one. Who is this for, then. Hardcore platformer collectors who specifically enjoy short, punishing indie gauntlets with retro aesthetics and a completionist achievement hook will find something worth respecting here. If you finished VVVVVV with a smile, or if you have a folder of obscure Steam platformers that nobody else talks about, Purple Heart fits that shelf. It is not built for the casual afternoon. It is built for the player who considers dying 30 times on a single screen a reasonable Tuesday. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:sub-5Hardcore PlatformerBox-Pushing PuzzlesAchievement Alphabet8-Bit SoundtrackRetro GauntletCompletion ChallengeLow-Spec Friendly

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
7,8
Memory
1024 MB RAM
Storage
80 MB available space
Graphics
512 MB
Processor
1.2 Ghz or faster processor
Additional Notes
Keyboard and Mouse

Recommended

OS
10
Memory
2048 MB RAM
Storage
150 MB available space
Graphics
2 GB
Processor
3.2 Ghz or faster processor
Additional Notes
Keyboard and Mouse, Gamepad

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Game Info

Developer
Artalasky
Publisher
Artalasky
Release Date
Nov 27, 2017

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Frequently asked questions about Purple Heart

Where can I buy Purple Heart cheapest?

Compare Purple Heart prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Purple Heart available on?

Purple Heart is available on PC.

When was Purple Heart released?

Purple Heart was released on 27 November 2017.

Who developed Purple Heart?

Purple Heart was developed by Artalasky.