Compare Sky Battles prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Peter Lacalamita. Published by Volens Nolens Games. Released on 3/25/2015. Available on PC, Mac. Genres: Action, Indie, Strategy.

Boss fights against krakens and giant robots in a biplane sounds wild on paper - but with mixed Steam reviews and a dead multiplayer scene, this is a bargain-bin curio at best.

I went into Sky Battles expecting a lightweight arcade shooter with some creature-feature charm, and in the narrowest possible sense that is what it delivers. You pilot a customizable biplane through ten single-player missions, collecting floating gems and destroying targets to advance, while a roster of eight oversized boss types - robots, sea monsters, dragons, and krakens among them - throw everything they have at you. The weapon loadout has a few interesting options: missiles for raw damage output, air mines for zone control, and a cloaking ability for players who prefer a stealthier angle. That variety sounds richer than the game actually feels in practice. The strategic label in the genre tags is doing a lot of heavy lifting here. There is some light decision-making around weapon choice and positioning, but calling this a strategy game would mislead anyone hoping for meaningful build decisions or layered systems. It plays much closer to an arcade action shooter with a thin layer of progression on top. The ten mission structure is short, and the gem-collecting objective loop repeats itself quickly enough that the ceiling on solo play becomes visible within an hour or two. The Steam review sample sitting at roughly 69 percent positive across a small review pool suggests the core loop lands for some players, but the low volume means that score should be read cautiously. Multiplayer is where Sky Battles could have extended its value, offering cross-platform online dogfights against other players. The honest reality in 2025 is that the active player count for a sub-five-dollar 2015 indie title is essentially zero. Finding a live match without a coordinated group of friends is unlikely, which collapses the more interesting half of the game entirely. It is also worth flagging that macOS Catalina and above are not supported, so Mac players on modern hardware are effectively locked out. For all that, Sky Battles was a solo passion project developed over roughly two and a half years by a single developer, and that context matters when calibrating expectations. The boss variety is genuinely imaginative - fighting a kraken or a fire-breathing dragon from a biplane cockpit is a concept with real personality. The customizable planes and upgradeable power-ups give the solo campaign a light sense of progression. If you treat this as a short-session arcade experience with a fun B-movie premise rather than a deep air-combat sim, the disappointment margin drops considerably. The tutorial is minimal, but so is the mechanical complexity, so newcomers will not feel stranded. The audience here is narrow: collectors who want trading cards and achievements, players willing to organise private multiplayer sessions with friends, or anyone curious enough about the biplane-versus-sea-monster premise to spend forty-five minutes with it. Do not come looking for AI worth studying, a mod ecosystem, or a late-game that opens up after the tenth mission. What is here is what is on the box, and the box is small. Diego, Scout Team

Sky Battles
ActionIndieStrategy

Sky Battles

Mar 25, 2015Peter LacalamitaVolens Nolens Games
GamerScout Says

Boss fights against krakens and giant robots in a biplane sounds wild on paper - but with mixed Steam reviews and a dead multiplayer scene, this is a bargain-bin curio at best.

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About Sky Battles

I went into Sky Battles expecting a lightweight arcade shooter with some creature-feature charm, and in the narrowest possible sense that is what it delivers. You pilot a customizable biplane through ten single-player missions, collecting floating gems and destroying targets to advance, while a roster of eight oversized boss types - robots, sea monsters, dragons, and krakens among them - throw everything they have at you. The weapon loadout has a few interesting options: missiles for raw damage output, air mines for zone control, and a cloaking ability for players who prefer a stealthier angle. That variety sounds richer than the game actually feels in practice. The strategic label in the genre tags is doing a lot of heavy lifting here. There is some light decision-making around weapon choice and positioning, but calling this a strategy game would mislead anyone hoping for meaningful build decisions or layered systems. It plays much closer to an arcade action shooter with a thin layer of progression on top. The ten mission structure is short, and the gem-collecting objective loop repeats itself quickly enough that the ceiling on solo play becomes visible within an hour or two. The Steam review sample sitting at roughly 69 percent positive across a small review pool suggests the core loop lands for some players, but the low volume means that score should be read cautiously. Multiplayer is where Sky Battles could have extended its value, offering cross-platform online dogfights against other players. The honest reality in 2025 is that the active player count for a sub-five-dollar 2015 indie title is essentially zero. Finding a live match without a coordinated group of friends is unlikely, which collapses the more interesting half of the game entirely. It is also worth flagging that macOS Catalina and above are not supported, so Mac players on modern hardware are effectively locked out. For all that, Sky Battles was a solo passion project developed over roughly two and a half years by a single developer, and that context matters when calibrating expectations. The boss variety is genuinely imaginative - fighting a kraken or a fire-breathing dragon from a biplane cockpit is a concept with real personality. The customizable planes and upgradeable power-ups give the solo campaign a light sense of progression. If you treat this as a short-session arcade experience with a fun B-movie premise rather than a deep air-combat sim, the disappointment margin drops considerably. The tutorial is minimal, but so is the mechanical complexity, so newcomers will not feel stranded. The audience here is narrow: collectors who want trading cards and achievements, players willing to organise private multiplayer sessions with friends, or anyone curious enough about the biplane-versus-sea-monster premise to spend forty-five minutes with it. Do not come looking for AI worth studying, a mod ecosystem, or a late-game that opens up after the tenth mission. What is here is what is on the box, and the box is small. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayercross-platformachievementstrading-cardstier:sub-5Boss RushArcade ShooterBiplane CombatGem CollectionShort CampaignWeapon LoadoutCloaking MechanicController Support

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Playable

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP
Memory
1024 MB RAM
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
250 MB available space
Graphics
OpenGL 2.1 compatibale + 256MB Video
Processor
1.2Ghz+

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Game Info

Developer
Peter Lacalamita
Publisher
Volens Nolens Games
Release Date
Mar 25, 2015

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Price History

2026-06-101.99(lowest)

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How much does Sky Battles cost?

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What platforms is Sky Battles available on?

Sky Battles is available on PC, Mac.

When was Sky Battles released?

Sky Battles was released on 25 March 2015.

Who developed Sky Battles?

Sky Battles was developed by Peter Lacalamita and published by Volens Nolens Games.