Once upon a time, I was a blogger and amateur modder here at ModDB. Now I return, to report on the latest and greatest mods, indies, and anything inbetween. I am a cynic Christian. I try very my best to be honest, no matter the cost. I am now a freelance games journalist but I still do an indie dev gig on the side.

Report RSS Stealth Bastard Review

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Original website: Stealthbastard.com

Stealth Bastard. It is very appropriately named. It is both bastardly hard at times and revolves a good bit around stealth. It's four mini-campaigns it starts you out with teach you the basics, introduce new concepts every campaign, and have varying level of challenge. I've got to be honest though, the most difficult campaigns are 2 and 3, rather than 4 and 5. Conviently, the game lets you skip up to 3 levels without playing a level, and will give you another ability to skip within each campaign with every successful mission. The gameplay itself jumps between masochistic platforming and ocassionaly stealth-centric moments (I say occasionally because really almost everything is twitch-based platforming). There's some vague allusions to something akin to the basic premise for Portal's story, but even then the story just doesn't really maintain itself. That doesn't necessarily hold the game back, but it makes the few weak attempts feel more like a frustrating reminder that we're supposedly here for some reason that the developer left out. When the game isn't pointing to its few faults, the game is really good at platforming. In the place of wall running, the game has a cliff-hanging platforming element that I wish more 2D games had (grabbing edges works in 3D, why not 2D?). In the recent few years I've played a good number of free 2D platformers, and I've got to say that Stealth Bastard is worth a download. It's not exactly going to beat out the Great Gatsby "NES" platformer ( Greatgatsbygame.com ), but it's clearly got promise. The 663 (as of this writing) free additional levels made by fans of the game certainly means you won't run out of content in this addictively masochistic platformer.

Nitpick moment Honestly the most questionable element included in the game has to be the Seeker enemy type. It's hamfisted in at the last minute and just feels like an excuse to not reuse other elements in a differing way. It's gameplay useage in downloadable levels may be more innovative, but in the main campaigns it feels unnecessary attempt at avoiding just making 3 scripted enemy paths.

Why You Should Play: Platforming is polished, Puzzles are (for the most part) Intelligent, and Graphics are Well Done. Very rewarding missions in campaigns 4-5.
Why You Shouldn't: Stealth isn't as much a focus as it could be, missions in campaigns 2 and 3 can vary in difficulty a bit too much, vague attempts at story telling are laughable at best.

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