Compare Westerado: Double Barreled prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Ostrich Banditos. Published by Adult Swim Games. Released on 4/16/2015. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie.

A hand-crafted open-world Western where every clue narrows your suspect list and your gun settles every argument. Revenge has never felt this personal.

Westerado: Double Barreled is a top-down open-world action game set in a hand-drawn pixel-art frontier that feels like someone distilled every dusty spaghetti Western into a single, lean experience. Your family is slaughtered by an unknown desperado, and the entire game is structured around hunting down that killer. The twist is that the killer's identity is randomized each playthrough, meaning you actually have to do the detective work. You gather witness testimonies, complete quests, and slowly assemble a profile hat by hat, bandana by bandana, until you can point a finger and pull a trigger. The open world is genuinely open. You can wander into almost any situation and resolve it at gunpoint, which is where the game's most playful mechanic lives. Holding someone at gunpoint freezes the conversation and shifts the power entirely to you. You can extort information, force cooperation, or just make someone very nervous while you think. It sounds gimmicky until you realize how deeply it threads through every quest and social interaction. Ostrich Banditos built an entire conversation system around that one action, and it holds up across the whole runtime. The pixel art carries real craft. The frontier towns, desert stretches, and canyon hideouts all have a worn, sun-bleached quality that feels intentional rather than default. The soundtrack matches that register, sitting somewhere between mournful folk and twangy tension, never overplaying the mood. For a game that originated as a browser title, the Double Barreled upgrade adds enough content, controls, and polish that it stands completely on its own. Character classes like the Outlaw, Barmaid, or Veteran each shift how the world reads you at the start, and multiple endings mean the shape of your revenge changes based on what you prioritized. Where the game has limits, they are mostly structural. The shooting itself is functional but not particularly deep, and some of the quest variety thins out once you have spent enough time with the loop. The randomized killer system can occasionally produce a reveal that feels mechanical rather than earned, especially if you have been efficient about clue-gathering. For a game this interested in narrative weight, the finale can land a little flat depending on how your run unfolded. These are honest trade-offs, not dealbreakers. Westerado is the kind of game that a lot of people walked past in 2015 and a lot of people are still walking past now. It runs short, maybe four to six hours for a focused playthrough, and it knows exactly when to end. That restraint is increasingly rare. If you want a Western that lets you be morally messy, rewards curiosity over combat skill, and wraps everything in pixel art that clearly had love put into it, this is exactly the overlooked gem that deserves your afternoon. Kai, Scout Team

Westerado: Double Barreled
ActionAdventureIndie

Westerado: Double Barreled

Apr 16, 2015Ostrich BanditosAdult Swim Games
GamerScout Says

A hand-crafted open-world Western where every clue narrows your suspect list and your gun settles every argument. Revenge has never felt this personal.

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About Westerado: Double Barreled

Westerado: Double Barreled is a top-down open-world action game set in a hand-drawn pixel-art frontier that feels like someone distilled every dusty spaghetti Western into a single, lean experience. Your family is slaughtered by an unknown desperado, and the entire game is structured around hunting down that killer. The twist is that the killer's identity is randomized each playthrough, meaning you actually have to do the detective work. You gather witness testimonies, complete quests, and slowly assemble a profile hat by hat, bandana by bandana, until you can point a finger and pull a trigger. The open world is genuinely open. You can wander into almost any situation and resolve it at gunpoint, which is where the game's most playful mechanic lives. Holding someone at gunpoint freezes the conversation and shifts the power entirely to you. You can extort information, force cooperation, or just make someone very nervous while you think. It sounds gimmicky until you realize how deeply it threads through every quest and social interaction. Ostrich Banditos built an entire conversation system around that one action, and it holds up across the whole runtime. The pixel art carries real craft. The frontier towns, desert stretches, and canyon hideouts all have a worn, sun-bleached quality that feels intentional rather than default. The soundtrack matches that register, sitting somewhere between mournful folk and twangy tension, never overplaying the mood. For a game that originated as a browser title, the Double Barreled upgrade adds enough content, controls, and polish that it stands completely on its own. Character classes like the Outlaw, Barmaid, or Veteran each shift how the world reads you at the start, and multiple endings mean the shape of your revenge changes based on what you prioritized. Where the game has limits, they are mostly structural. The shooting itself is functional but not particularly deep, and some of the quest variety thins out once you have spent enough time with the loop. The randomized killer system can occasionally produce a reveal that feels mechanical rather than earned, especially if you have been efficient about clue-gathering. For a game this interested in narrative weight, the finale can land a little flat depending on how your run unfolded. These are honest trade-offs, not dealbreakers. Westerado is the kind of game that a lot of people walked past in 2015 and a lot of people are still walking past now. It runs short, maybe four to six hours for a focused playthrough, and it knows exactly when to end. That restraint is increasingly rare. If you want a Western that lets you be morally messy, rewards curiosity over combat skill, and wraps everything in pixel art that clearly had love put into it, this is exactly the overlooked gem that deserves your afternoon. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

steamPixel WesternRandomized MysteryGunpoint NegotiationMultiple EndingsRevenge NarrativeClass SelectionShort PlaythroughReplayable Story

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
91%(1,903)

Game Info

Developer
Ostrich Banditos
Publisher
Adult Swim Games
Release Date
Apr 16, 2015

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