Kidbash: Super Legend takes us to the O.D.D., a world inhabited by forgotten video game characters. We control Kidbash, a hero with amnesia searching for his identity while navigating vibrant and challenging levels. The game combines weapons to create more powerful ones, collects random modifications that alter combat and platforms, and includes a village-building system with meta-progression. Acclaim points to it as a bold indie title for roguelike fans. 🎮
The technique behind the mud: claymation and custom engine 🛠️
The visual aspect of Kidbash: Super Legend is inspired by claymation and the style of studios like Laika, achieving organic textures and movements reminiscent of stop-motion animation. Everything runs on a custom-developed engine that optimizes procedural level generation without sacrificing fluidity. The weapon combination system relies on a database of modifiers that link in real-time, while random upgrades are assigned using a rarity algorithm. The village building, for its part, uses a persistence system that saves progress between runs, a technical detail that many titles in the genre overlook.
Forgotten yes, but with good weapons 🔫
It's curious that a game about forgotten characters has more personality than many trendy heroes. Kidbash doesn't need a tragic past with flashbacks every five minutes; it's enough for him to shoot with a weapon that combines a pickled gherkin and an electric guitar. And while other titles sell you nostalgia as if it were caviar, here you get the option to build a village so the forgotten NPCs have somewhere to complain about their luck. Quite a detail.