![]() Clustertruck’s motley crew of truckers are terrible drivers. However, as hilarious as most failures are, regardless of whether it is the player’s or truck’s fault (often both), there are a small handful of levels that rely too heavily on luck to be overlooked. Moments such as trucks spiralling uncontrollably into the air after being hit by a missile produce many laugh-out-loud moments due to the sheer absurdity of the action. It’s difficult to get too mad about moments like these, because of the instant retry feature and the unexpected moments of hilarity responsible for foiling your run at the last second. Furthering this, the game’s great sense of pace makes for many frantic moments of truck parkour.īuilding up momentum to attempt long jumps is thrilling and at times stressful when the truck you’re aiming to land on suddenly tips over for no damn good reason at all. ![]() Couple this with the content-rich stylings of over 100 levels, Clustertruck will keep you entertained for a while. Striving to be the ultimate one-more-try game, Clustertruck makes it devilishly easy to keep playing for a few more minutes upon failing a level, a single press of the button puts you immediately back in the truck-hopping action. The UI is refreshingly almost non-existent, firmly placing the focus on the hilariously bizarre truck-jumping mayhem. From boot-up, everything is presented through delightfully simple visuals and a vibrant colour palette. Really, the only thing the game doesn’t do is release the trucks with trucks in their cabins and when they honk, they shoot trucks at you.Ĭlustertruck instantly signals its intentions of being zany action first, everything else last. The difference between Clustertruck and what your younger-self played on the living room furniture much to your parents’ exasperation? Your path from start to finish is littered with identical, erratically-driven trucks, where falling off means instant failure.įeaturing over 100 levels to plough through, Clustertruck keeps the action moving briskly throughout, never lingering on any one novelty concept for too long before swiftly introducing a new wrinkle, such as lasers, or cannons that shoot trucks at you. ![]() First-person platformer Clustertruck replicates the childhood joy of playing “the floor is lava” – some levels adopt the concept very literally.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |