Compare What The Duck prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Seize Studios. Published by Untold Tales. Released on 11/9/2023. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie, RPG.

Charming concept, rocky execution: a 3D action-RPG where your spirit animal is a duck and the world never lets you forget it, but technical rough edges and thin combat may test your patience.

I want to root for What The Duck, and part of me still does. Seize Studios is a small independent studio out of Brasilia, and you can feel the love stitched into this game's premise: a world built on spirit-animal hierarchy where everyone else gets wolves and dragons, and you get a waddling duckling. That underdog energy is real, and the story threads of revenge and self-acceptance give the whole thing a warmth that punches above its production weight. The game spreads itself across four biomes, each loaded with quests, puzzles, mini-games, and secrets. The duck companion is not just cosmetic. You can switch control to your feathered buddy to fly, swim, access blocked areas, and nudge hidden things out of the scenery. When the puzzle design leans into that dual-character dynamic, the game finds its rhythm. The hack-and-slash combat lets you swap weapons on the fly to chain combos and layer in elemental buffs, which sounds more intricate than it plays in practice. The depth is there on paper, but moment-to-moment combat rarely demands that you use it. The standout mechanic is Rhymesmith, the rhythm-based weapon forging mini-game. Hit the beats cleanly and your crafted weapon comes out stronger. It is a small idea executed with personality, and it gives resource gathering a purpose beyond menu navigation. Collecting materials and tuning your arsenal to the beat of a song is the kind of handcrafted touch that makes you appreciate the studio's instincts even when the broader design falters. Where the game struggles is in the gap between ambition and polish. Community reception has landed in mixed territory, with criticism centering on technical issues and combat that does not feel as compelling as the concept deserves. A quirky personality and a story worth caring about are real assets, but they cannot fully carry a game when the systems underneath feel underdeveloped. If you go in expecting a tight, well-oiled action RPG, you will likely feel the friction. If you go in expecting a scrappy, big-hearted indie that tries several things and lands some of them, the duck has something to offer. This one is for patient players who find the small studios that nobody covers and appreciate what they were reaching for. The Rhymesmith alone is worth a look. Kai, Scout Team

What The Duck
ActionAdventureIndieRPG

What The Duck

Nov 9, 2023Seize StudiosUntold Tales
GamerScout Says

Charming concept, rocky execution: a 3D action-RPG where your spirit animal is a duck and the world never lets you forget it, but technical rough edges and thin combat may test your patience.

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Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About What The Duck

I want to root for What The Duck, and part of me still does. Seize Studios is a small independent studio out of Brasilia, and you can feel the love stitched into this game's premise: a world built on spirit-animal hierarchy where everyone else gets wolves and dragons, and you get a waddling duckling. That underdog energy is real, and the story threads of revenge and self-acceptance give the whole thing a warmth that punches above its production weight. The game spreads itself across four biomes, each loaded with quests, puzzles, mini-games, and secrets. The duck companion is not just cosmetic. You can switch control to your feathered buddy to fly, swim, access blocked areas, and nudge hidden things out of the scenery. When the puzzle design leans into that dual-character dynamic, the game finds its rhythm. The hack-and-slash combat lets you swap weapons on the fly to chain combos and layer in elemental buffs, which sounds more intricate than it plays in practice. The depth is there on paper, but moment-to-moment combat rarely demands that you use it. The standout mechanic is Rhymesmith, the rhythm-based weapon forging mini-game. Hit the beats cleanly and your crafted weapon comes out stronger. It is a small idea executed with personality, and it gives resource gathering a purpose beyond menu navigation. Collecting materials and tuning your arsenal to the beat of a song is the kind of handcrafted touch that makes you appreciate the studio's instincts even when the broader design falters. Where the game struggles is in the gap between ambition and polish. Community reception has landed in mixed territory, with criticism centering on technical issues and combat that does not feel as compelling as the concept deserves. A quirky personality and a story worth caring about are real assets, but they cannot fully carry a game when the systems underneath feel underdeveloped. If you go in expecting a tight, well-oiled action RPG, you will likely feel the friction. If you go in expecting a scrappy, big-hearted indie that tries several things and lands some of them, the duck has something to offer. This one is for patient players who find the small studios that nobody covers and appreciate what they were reaching for. The Rhymesmith alone is worth a look. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:sub-5Spirit Animal SystemRhythm CraftingDual-Character PuzzlesElemental CombatBiome ExplorationUnderdog Narrative3D Action-RPGCompanion Mechanics

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 SP1+
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
6 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA Geforce GTX 650
Processor
Intel Core i5 or better

Recommended

OS
Windows 10+
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
8 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA Geforce GTX 770
Processor
Intel Core i7

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Seize Studios
Publisher
Untold Tales
Release Date
Nov 9, 2023

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