Compare Starship Annihilator prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by IR Studio. Published by IR Studio. Released on 9/2/2016. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Indie.

A no-frills vertical scrolling shooter with 10 levels and boss fights that wears its arcade roots proudly, but struggles to stand out in a crowded genre.

Starship Annihilator is a classic vertical scrolling shooter from IR Studio, the kind of game that could have lived on a coin-op cabinet in 1991 and nobody would have blinked. You pilot a ship, enemies scroll toward you in waves, power-ups drop to modify your weapons, and every tenth stage or so a boss shows up to test whether you have been paying attention. That loop is as old as the genre itself, and if that sentence made something in your chest light up, this game was made for you. The structure is lean and deliberate: 10 levels, 10 boss encounters, a handful of power-ups that change how your shots spread, concentrate, or layer. There is no pretense of being anything grander than a weekend shmup session. Each level introduces different enemy formations and bullet patterns, so even if the moment-to-moment feel stays consistent, the game does make a quiet effort to keep you on your toes. Whether that effort is enough depends entirely on how forgiving you are with budget indie shooters. Here is where honesty matters. The Mixed Steam rating, sitting at 63 percent from a modest pool of reviews, signals real friction. Players coming from tight, polished shmups like Ikaruga or even free browser-era shooters may find Starship Annihilator rough around the edges. The lack of notable features, the absence of local co-op or leaderboards, and a visual presentation that plays it very safe all combine to make the game feel thin when compared to peers. The power-up variety is real but not deep enough to encourage experimentation over several runs. Once you have seen a weapon modification, you largely know what you are getting. Where the game earns a small amount of goodwill is in its honesty about what it is. IR Studio did not oversell this. It is a compact, functional shooter built around a genre template that has worked for decades. If you are an older player chasing the specific sensation of a vertical shooter with straightforward controls and boss encounters that feel earned rather than cheap, there is something here for a quiet afternoon. Just do not expect the game to surprise you, and do not expect production values that reach beyond the basics. As a narrative and indie specialist I will be straight with you: this is not the kind of small game I usually advocate for, because the craft and intentionality I look for in handmade games is not strongly present here. The game functions, and it completes what it promises, but it does not feel like it was made with a burning need to exist. If a deeply personal shmup with atmosphere and vision is what you want, look elsewhere. If you specifically need a low-stakes, low-complexity vertical shooter that does not ask much of you, Starship Annihilator will hold up for its short runtime without embarrassing itself. Kai, Scout Team

Starship Annihilator
ActionIndie

Starship Annihilator

Sep 2, 2016IR Studio
GamerScout Says

A no-frills vertical scrolling shooter with 10 levels and boss fights that wears its arcade roots proudly, but struggles to stand out in a crowded genre.

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About Starship Annihilator

Starship Annihilator is a classic vertical scrolling shooter from IR Studio, the kind of game that could have lived on a coin-op cabinet in 1991 and nobody would have blinked. You pilot a ship, enemies scroll toward you in waves, power-ups drop to modify your weapons, and every tenth stage or so a boss shows up to test whether you have been paying attention. That loop is as old as the genre itself, and if that sentence made something in your chest light up, this game was made for you. The structure is lean and deliberate: 10 levels, 10 boss encounters, a handful of power-ups that change how your shots spread, concentrate, or layer. There is no pretense of being anything grander than a weekend shmup session. Each level introduces different enemy formations and bullet patterns, so even if the moment-to-moment feel stays consistent, the game does make a quiet effort to keep you on your toes. Whether that effort is enough depends entirely on how forgiving you are with budget indie shooters. Here is where honesty matters. The Mixed Steam rating, sitting at 63 percent from a modest pool of reviews, signals real friction. Players coming from tight, polished shmups like Ikaruga or even free browser-era shooters may find Starship Annihilator rough around the edges. The lack of notable features, the absence of local co-op or leaderboards, and a visual presentation that plays it very safe all combine to make the game feel thin when compared to peers. The power-up variety is real but not deep enough to encourage experimentation over several runs. Once you have seen a weapon modification, you largely know what you are getting. Where the game earns a small amount of goodwill is in its honesty about what it is. IR Studio did not oversell this. It is a compact, functional shooter built around a genre template that has worked for decades. If you are an older player chasing the specific sensation of a vertical shooter with straightforward controls and boss encounters that feel earned rather than cheap, there is something here for a quiet afternoon. Just do not expect the game to surprise you, and do not expect production values that reach beyond the basics. As a narrative and indie specialist I will be straight with you: this is not the kind of small game I usually advocate for, because the craft and intentionality I look for in handmade games is not strongly present here. The game functions, and it completes what it promises, but it does not feel like it was made with a burning need to exist. If a deeply personal shmup with atmosphere and vision is what you want, look elsewhere. If you specifically need a low-stakes, low-complexity vertical shooter that does not ask much of you, Starship Annihilator will hold up for its short runtime without embarrassing itself. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

steamVertical Scrolling ShooterBullet PatternsBoss RushArcade-stylePower-up SystemShort RuntimeSingle Player OnlyRetro Shooter

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
63%(372)

Game Info

Developer
IR Studio
Publisher
IR Studio
Release Date
Sep 2, 2016

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