Compare Woodle Tree 2: Deluxe+ prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Fabio Ferrara. Published by Chubby Pixel. Released on 12/17/2019. Available on PC, Mac, Linux, Xbox. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie.

A solo-dev 3D collectathon that genuinely outgrew its predecessor, built for anyone who misses the unhurried open-world platformers of the early 2000s and doesn't mind some rough edges.

My instinct with tiny-studio platformers is to manage expectations hard, so I want to be upfront: Woodle Tree 2: Deluxe+ surprised me. Fabio Ferrara, working essentially solo under the Chubby Pixel banner, took a short and rough first game and rebuilt it into something considerably more generous. The result sits in a specific, underserved lane: a bright, nature-themed open-world collectathon that has more in common with early-2000s 3D platformers than anything fashionable right now, and it wears that identity without apology. The core loop is classic and unambiguous. You play as Woodle, a sentient tree-stump, running and jumping across eight thematically distinct open zones ranging from forests and deserts to seashores and mountain peaks. The mission is to recover water tears stolen from eight guardian Sage trees, which can be tackled in any order you like since the world is open from the start. Along the way you collect red berries as currency for upgrades and cosmetics, hunt optional blue berries that unlock abilities unavailable through the shop, and carry water droplets across environmental puzzles that require a genuinely careful hand. Woodle himself has a double jump, wall jump, a brief combo attack, and a leaf he can hold up to glide, with additional moves unlocking as you progress. Fast travel between checkpoints means backtracking to upgrade at your home base never feels punishing. Local co-op for up to four players is included for the whole main adventure, and the Deluxe+ edition bundles in the "Sleepin' Flowers" DLC with harder challenge stages. Where the game earns real affection is in its atmosphere and the sense that every design choice came from a place of care. The color palette is deliberate, vivid without being garish, and each zone has its own visual identity. The soundtrack is ambient and fitting, though it can feel a touch repetitive in longer sessions and lacks the sonic depth you'd hope for. The world has a storybook quality to its opening, and the NPCs scattered across each area give gentle hints rather than overwhelming you with waypoints. There is no hand-holding after the short mandatory tutorial, which will appeal to players who like to read the landscape rather than a quest arrow. Honesty requires flagging the friction points too. The camera is the most persistent complaint across reviewers, and it earns that reputation. In tighter platforming sections it can work against you, and some of the more precise jumps demand patience the camera doesn't always reward. Occasional framerate dips and minor glitches appear in the Steam version, and some areas feel underpopulated, more empty space than designed challenge. The aesthetic is deliberately minimalist, which reads as charming to some and visually flat to others. This is a budget production built with passion, and both halves of that description are equally true. Who is this for? Players who grew up with the Croc series, early 3D Kirby, or the lower-budget end of N64-era platformers will find something genuinely comfortable here. Families looking for a couch co-op platformer with no violence concerns, a forgiving health system, and a calm nature theme will also get solid value. Hardcore platformer fans chasing tight controls and punishing precision should look elsewhere. If you can hold the rough edges alongside the handcraft, Woodle Tree 2: Deluxe+ is a small game that knows what it wants to be, and gets there more often than not. Kai, Scout Team

Woodle Tree 2: Deluxe+
ActionAdventureIndie

Woodle Tree 2: Deluxe+

Dec 17, 2019Fabio FerraraChubby Pixel
GamerScout Says

A solo-dev 3D collectathon that genuinely outgrew its predecessor, built for anyone who misses the unhurried open-world platformers of the early 2000s and doesn't mind some rough edges.

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About Woodle Tree 2: Deluxe+

My instinct with tiny-studio platformers is to manage expectations hard, so I want to be upfront: Woodle Tree 2: Deluxe+ surprised me. Fabio Ferrara, working essentially solo under the Chubby Pixel banner, took a short and rough first game and rebuilt it into something considerably more generous. The result sits in a specific, underserved lane: a bright, nature-themed open-world collectathon that has more in common with early-2000s 3D platformers than anything fashionable right now, and it wears that identity without apology. The core loop is classic and unambiguous. You play as Woodle, a sentient tree-stump, running and jumping across eight thematically distinct open zones ranging from forests and deserts to seashores and mountain peaks. The mission is to recover water tears stolen from eight guardian Sage trees, which can be tackled in any order you like since the world is open from the start. Along the way you collect red berries as currency for upgrades and cosmetics, hunt optional blue berries that unlock abilities unavailable through the shop, and carry water droplets across environmental puzzles that require a genuinely careful hand. Woodle himself has a double jump, wall jump, a brief combo attack, and a leaf he can hold up to glide, with additional moves unlocking as you progress. Fast travel between checkpoints means backtracking to upgrade at your home base never feels punishing. Local co-op for up to four players is included for the whole main adventure, and the Deluxe+ edition bundles in the "Sleepin' Flowers" DLC with harder challenge stages. Where the game earns real affection is in its atmosphere and the sense that every design choice came from a place of care. The color palette is deliberate, vivid without being garish, and each zone has its own visual identity. The soundtrack is ambient and fitting, though it can feel a touch repetitive in longer sessions and lacks the sonic depth you'd hope for. The world has a storybook quality to its opening, and the NPCs scattered across each area give gentle hints rather than overwhelming you with waypoints. There is no hand-holding after the short mandatory tutorial, which will appeal to players who like to read the landscape rather than a quest arrow. Honesty requires flagging the friction points too. The camera is the most persistent complaint across reviewers, and it earns that reputation. In tighter platforming sections it can work against you, and some of the more precise jumps demand patience the camera doesn't always reward. Occasional framerate dips and minor glitches appear in the Steam version, and some areas feel underpopulated, more empty space than designed challenge. The aesthetic is deliberately minimalist, which reads as charming to some and visually flat to others. This is a budget production built with passion, and both halves of that description are equally true. Who is this for? Players who grew up with the Croc series, early 3D Kirby, or the lower-budget end of N64-era platformers will find something genuinely comfortable here. Families looking for a couch co-op platformer with no violence concerns, a forgiving health system, and a calm nature theme will also get solid value. Hardcore platformer fans chasing tight controls and punishing precision should look elsewhere. If you can hold the rough edges alongside the handcraft, Woodle Tree 2: Deluxe+ is a small game that knows what it wants to be, and gets there more often than not. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayercooplocal-coopachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardstier:indieCollectathonOpen-World PlatformerNature ThemeLocal Co-op 4-PlayerBerry CurrencyCouch Co-opUpgrade SystemEnvironmental PuzzlesSolo Developer

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP Service Pack 3 32-bit
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
SM 3.0 con 512MB VRAM; NVIDIA GeForce 8500 GT / AMD Radeon HD 4650 or higher
Processor
Intel Dual-Core 2.6 GHz / AMD Dual-Core Athlon 3.0 GHz
Sound Card
DirectX Compatible
Additional Notes
Play with the gamepad for the best experience!

Recommended

OS
Windows 7 or higher
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
SM 3.0 with 1GB VRAM; NVIDIA GeForce GTX 280 / AMD Radeon HD 4830 or greater
Processor
Quad-Core Processor
Sound Card
DirectX Compatible
Additional Notes
Play with the gamepad for the best experience!

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Fabio Ferrara
Publisher
Chubby Pixel
Release Date
Dec 17, 2019

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