Compare Splat Arena prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by StarSystemStudios. Published by StarSystemStudios. Released on 11/21/2023. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Casual, Indie.

A one-person passion project channeling the anarchic chaos of Newgrounds-era flash violence into a top-down shooter. Worth a look if the budget price matches your tolerance for rough edges.

I have a soft spot for the kind of game that announces itself with a single sentence and no apologies. Splat Arena is exactly that: a solo-developed top-down shooter built by one person at StarSystemStudios, wearing its Madness Combat inspiration openly on its sleeve. If you spent any time in the mid-2000s watching stick figures brutalize each other in neon hallways on Newgrounds, you will recognize the spiritual DNA here instantly. That is both the strongest thing Splat Arena has going for it, and the clearest signal of who it is not for. The core loop runs through a story mode built across more than ten levels, alternating between tight corridor segments and open neon city environments. There is a leveling system that gates new weapons behind rank progression, and the enemy roster includes multiple types plus boss encounters. On paper that structure is solid enough for a short, punchy action session. In practice, being a solo-made Unity title with a footprint under 400 MB, the ambition and the execution do not always line up. The cartoony aesthetic and top-down perspective do their job of keeping the action readable, but the overall production sits firmly in the rough-and-ready tier. Do not come expecting fluid animation or layered audio design. Come expecting bursts of frantic shooting in enclosed spaces with the kind of blunt energy that defined those old Flash animations. What is genuinely worth noting is the context. StarSystemStudios is, by their own account, one person trying to bring ideas to life in small, self-contained packages. Splat Arena fits that description honestly. It is not pretending to be a 20-hour campaign. The achievements are there for completion-focused players who want a light checklist to work through, and the locked 60fps target at least signals that someone cared about keeping the action consistent. The Madness Combat lineage means the violence is cartoonish rather than gratuitous in a distressing way, leaning into absurdist splatter rather than grim realism. The honest caveats are real though. There is almost no community signal to draw from, which means you are buying into a game with very limited player feedback. Bugs, balance gaps, or pacing issues that a larger player base would surface and flag may be sitting quietly here. The linear structure and modest scope mean you are looking at a session or two of content at most. If you are hoping for deep weapon variety or emergent build crafting, Splat Arena is not structured to deliver that. It is a short, punchy, Newgrounds-flavoured run through rooms of enemies, and that is its entire offer. For a certain kind of player, specifically someone who wants thirty to ninety minutes of arcade-style top-down violence with a nostalgic undercurrent, this scratches that itch at a price point that reflects its scale. For anyone expecting polish comparable to its inspiration's more developed successors, you will want to look elsewhere. Judge it as a small indie working within tight limits and it earns a cautious recommendation. Kai, Scout Team

Splat Arena
ActionCasualIndie

Splat Arena

Nov 21, 2023StarSystemStudios
GamerScout Says

A one-person passion project channeling the anarchic chaos of Newgrounds-era flash violence into a top-down shooter. Worth a look if the budget price matches your tolerance for rough edges.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Splat Arena

I have a soft spot for the kind of game that announces itself with a single sentence and no apologies. Splat Arena is exactly that: a solo-developed top-down shooter built by one person at StarSystemStudios, wearing its Madness Combat inspiration openly on its sleeve. If you spent any time in the mid-2000s watching stick figures brutalize each other in neon hallways on Newgrounds, you will recognize the spiritual DNA here instantly. That is both the strongest thing Splat Arena has going for it, and the clearest signal of who it is not for. The core loop runs through a story mode built across more than ten levels, alternating between tight corridor segments and open neon city environments. There is a leveling system that gates new weapons behind rank progression, and the enemy roster includes multiple types plus boss encounters. On paper that structure is solid enough for a short, punchy action session. In practice, being a solo-made Unity title with a footprint under 400 MB, the ambition and the execution do not always line up. The cartoony aesthetic and top-down perspective do their job of keeping the action readable, but the overall production sits firmly in the rough-and-ready tier. Do not come expecting fluid animation or layered audio design. Come expecting bursts of frantic shooting in enclosed spaces with the kind of blunt energy that defined those old Flash animations. What is genuinely worth noting is the context. StarSystemStudios is, by their own account, one person trying to bring ideas to life in small, self-contained packages. Splat Arena fits that description honestly. It is not pretending to be a 20-hour campaign. The achievements are there for completion-focused players who want a light checklist to work through, and the locked 60fps target at least signals that someone cared about keeping the action consistent. The Madness Combat lineage means the violence is cartoonish rather than gratuitous in a distressing way, leaning into absurdist splatter rather than grim realism. The honest caveats are real though. There is almost no community signal to draw from, which means you are buying into a game with very limited player feedback. Bugs, balance gaps, or pacing issues that a larger player base would surface and flag may be sitting quietly here. The linear structure and modest scope mean you are looking at a session or two of content at most. If you are hoping for deep weapon variety or emergent build crafting, Splat Arena is not structured to deliver that. It is a short, punchy, Newgrounds-flavoured run through rooms of enemies, and that is its entire offer. For a certain kind of player, specifically someone who wants thirty to ninety minutes of arcade-style top-down violence with a nostalgic undercurrent, this scratches that itch at a price point that reflects its scale. For anyone expecting polish comparable to its inspiration's more developed successors, you will want to look elsewhere. Judge it as a small indie working within tight limits and it earns a cautious recommendation. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:sub-5Madness Combat InspiredNewgrounds AestheticBoss FightsWeapon ProgressionShort-FormCartoon ViolenceSolo Developer

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 / 10 / 11
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
400 MB available space
Graphics
Geforce GTX 660 Or AMD equivalent
Processor
I5 Quad core
Sound Card
standard onboard sound card
VR Support
Not supported
Additional Notes
Game runs in locked 60FPS

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
StarSystemStudios
Publisher
StarSystemStudios
Release Date
Nov 21, 2023

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