Compare Rampage Ragdoll prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by ijal Studio. Published by HandMade Games. Released on 1/9/2018. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Casual, Indie.

Two ragdolls flailing at each other with zero netcode overhead sounds fun until you realize the whole game fits in a 200MB install and has 12 Steam reviews split down the middle. Buy only if a couch buddy is physically present.

I'll be honest: when I loaded this one up I was half-expecting some scrappy physics fighter that punches above its weight class. What I got instead was the videogame equivalent of a tech demo that never graduated. Rampage Ragdoll is a local-only brawler built around floaty ragdoll physics, and the entire feature set is exactly as thin as it sounds: you fight the AI, or you plug in a second controller and fight your friend. That is the game. The two-player local versus mode is the only reason anyone would reasonably keep this installed. With a friend sharing the keyboard or handing over an Xbox controller, the ragdoll chaos produces a handful of genuine laugh-out-loud moments purely because the physics engine is unpredictable enough to feel accidental rather than designed. Limbs flop, bodies pile, someone wins through a combination of button mashing and chaos. Call it a low-fi Toribash without the depth, or Gang Beasts without the production budget or the online infrastructure. If you have thirty seconds of patience and a sibling next to you, there is a sliver of fun here. The single-player mode against the AI wears out almost immediately. The AI has no meaningful read on your inputs, the controls feel stiff and over-mapped for what is functionally a one-button gag, and the community itself has noted that the sheer number of key bindings is baffling for a game this shallow. There is no ranked mode, no progression, no unlockables, no online play, nothing that would make you return after the first session. The Steam community is practically empty. Twelve user reviews at a mixed 58 percent positive is not a vote of confidence from anyone. From a technical standpoint at least the bar is microscopic: minimum specs call for a GeForce 510 and a Pentium G3260 with 1 GB of RAM, so this will run on literally anything you own. The install footprint is around 200 MB. It supports Remote Play Together on Steam if you desperately want to share the experience remotely, which is the one modern feature that gives it any marginal online utility. But there is no dedicated server, no matchmaking, and no real reason to think about netcode at all because the experience was never designed around online play in the first place. If you are a shooter or brawler fan who cares about weapon balance, movement tech, or a ranked ladder with any substance, there is nothing here for you. This belongs in the bottom of a bundle pile or in a ten-minute couch session before you boot up something that actually rewards your time. Fred, Scout Team

Rampage Ragdoll
ActionCasualIndie

Rampage Ragdoll

Jan 9, 2018ijal StudioHandMade Games
GamerScout Says

Two ragdolls flailing at each other with zero netcode overhead sounds fun until you realize the whole game fits in a 200MB install and has 12 Steam reviews split down the middle. Buy only if a couch buddy is physically present.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Rampage Ragdoll

I'll be honest: when I loaded this one up I was half-expecting some scrappy physics fighter that punches above its weight class. What I got instead was the videogame equivalent of a tech demo that never graduated. Rampage Ragdoll is a local-only brawler built around floaty ragdoll physics, and the entire feature set is exactly as thin as it sounds: you fight the AI, or you plug in a second controller and fight your friend. That is the game. The two-player local versus mode is the only reason anyone would reasonably keep this installed. With a friend sharing the keyboard or handing over an Xbox controller, the ragdoll chaos produces a handful of genuine laugh-out-loud moments purely because the physics engine is unpredictable enough to feel accidental rather than designed. Limbs flop, bodies pile, someone wins through a combination of button mashing and chaos. Call it a low-fi Toribash without the depth, or Gang Beasts without the production budget or the online infrastructure. If you have thirty seconds of patience and a sibling next to you, there is a sliver of fun here. The single-player mode against the AI wears out almost immediately. The AI has no meaningful read on your inputs, the controls feel stiff and over-mapped for what is functionally a one-button gag, and the community itself has noted that the sheer number of key bindings is baffling for a game this shallow. There is no ranked mode, no progression, no unlockables, no online play, nothing that would make you return after the first session. The Steam community is practically empty. Twelve user reviews at a mixed 58 percent positive is not a vote of confidence from anyone. From a technical standpoint at least the bar is microscopic: minimum specs call for a GeForce 510 and a Pentium G3260 with 1 GB of RAM, so this will run on literally anything you own. The install footprint is around 200 MB. It supports Remote Play Together on Steam if you desperately want to share the experience remotely, which is the one modern feature that gives it any marginal online utility. But there is no dedicated server, no matchmaking, and no real reason to think about netcode at all because the experience was never designed around online play in the first place. If you are a shooter or brawler fan who cares about weapon balance, movement tech, or a ranked ladder with any substance, there is nothing here for you. This belongs in the bottom of a bundle pile or in a ten-minute couch session before you boot up something that actually rewards your time. Fred, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerpvplocal-multiplayertier:sub-5Local VersusPhysics BrawlerCouch Co-opController SupportNo Online MultiplayerBare-Bones

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10
Memory
1000 MB RAM
Storage
200 MB available space
Processor
Intel Pentium G3260

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Memory
2000 MB RAM
Storage
200 MB available space
Processor
Intel Core i3

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
ijal Studio
Publisher
HandMade Games
Release Date
Jan 9, 2018

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