Uncle Nook’s Monster Emporium
Waking up in your Hotel room, you notice something. You see a small motionless doll. Her face is forever stuck screaming in terror. When you get closer, you see sharp teeth in her mouth and a knife in her hands. You push her away and run! You only have one chance to escape from this Nightmare!
Explore your way through a procedurally generated haunted mansion. Watch out for monsters and deadly traps that block your way. Only with creativity and persistence will you make it out alive!
Key Features
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Single Player
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32 Randomized Rooms
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3 A.I. Monsters
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31 Relics
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13 Weapons
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1 Boss Fight
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2 Endings
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Readable Notes and Hints
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Unique Puzzles
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And more…
Read More: Best Procedural Generation Puzzle Games.
Chrysalis
Chrysalis is a hybrid tower-defense/survival RPG set in a world of natural mythology, with an emphasis on procedural generation, customizability, and replayability. Play the role of an incorporeal Wisp tasked with defending a magical chrysalis against forces of corruption and darkness. Search for resources and enlist the aid of friendly plants and animals as you explore each randomly generated level. Fend off waves of monsters, with each level offering new challenges, specialized wave types, procedurally generated bosses, and more.
Key Features:
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Symbiosis: take control of any friendly plant or animal in the game.
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Metamorphosis: level up your creatures and plants, transform them into more powerful versions, and apply elemental Spirits for further customization.
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Mutation: a complex mutation system combines different species to create new creatures with unique sets of abilities and metamorphoses.
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Customization: at the beginning of each playthrough, you choose a Chrysalis that caters to a specific style of play, with unlockable abilities that increase your power as you progress. By defeating waves of monsters, you will earn Boons which grant additional passive or active abilities, offering further ways to enhance your controlled creatures.
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Modability: add new creature and plant species, abilities, art, and more by simply editing text files and dropping your images into the appropriate folder. Specific instructions and documentation will be forthcoming.
Fractus
Somewhere tiny, deep in the fractal foam, there is a strange and vivid world… a world with two dimensions, weird noises, and the all-consuming urge to gather more points. Welcome to Fractus! Blast your way through waves of organisms to release the portal to the next level, where you can do it all again! There is an infinite number of levels, but things get difficult quickly. How far can you get?
Fractus is an abstract twin stick shooter for Windows and Linux. It is a unique visual experience and a challenging game. Most of the graphics are fractal objects that are procedurally generated on the GPU. It also features an odd medley of guitar-generated sound effects.
Read More: Best Procedural Generation Abstract Games.
So Much Blood
So Much Blood shows the potential of being a good game. It’s certainly not a lemon by any means. However, the flaws in the game, both fundamental and game design choices, make it a game that only genre fanatics will enjoy. The mass appeal wears off very quickly especially because you are limited to horizontal shooting and the procedurally generated rooms are too repetitive. There is, however, so much blood.
4.5/10
For a more comprehensive review of So Much Blood please visit Gamephasis . Please feel free to join our Steam group
– Real player with 20.2 hrs in game
The first time I started the game, the first thing that hit me is the music. The music is good. The game is addicting, I’ve played for one hour straight and didn’t stop. The levels or stages have different feels to them. All the bosses are fun to try to beat. (Then lose all the lives) When you die you don’t lose everything, (ex. points) whick makes it feel like every life lost has did somthing good for me. The shop is done extremely well. It’s easy to navigate.
The music gets old quickly but you can easily turn it off and play your own music. The level design is bland. However since the levels are randomly generated, there is always a new level every time you start a new game.
– Real player with 9.1 hrs in game
Admine
This is a great game! its difficult and requires alot of thinking, and a great spin off of minesweeper. definitely would recommend to the heavy puzzle gamer. only one minor bug where game occasionally will crash when pressing space on a charging tile, but with that as the only exception, this game is great.
– Real player with 19.9 hrs in game
Welcome Hacker,
To this procedurally-generated facility filled with traps.
With your trusty scanner and fully-charged breach zapper.
You must navigate through a hidden maze.
While you scan the area for security measures.
Creating sector marks on a virtual map.
You will find color key-cards to open special doors.
All in an effort to locate that elusive elevator.
So you can carefully ascend to the next level,
Until you reach the central server on the 7th floor.
ADMINE features 8 excellent techno tracks by 3kliksphilip.
– Real player with 17.6 hrs in game
City Z
I bougth this game just to test it but I´ve gave me a big surprise. Very funny and adictive game. I recomend it . One thing I would improve is when you don´t have amunition in Survival MOde, It could be some king of clues over the map.
– Real player with 10.4 hrs in game
Update: HTC VIVE users - try sitting down [on the floor] to play it helps with the camera. Game errors out when trying to run from VR mode - have to actually shut down SteamVR and run game in normal mode to be able to play.
The concept is fun but in VR (Vive or Rift - tried in both) it is a bit disorienting with the camera being stuck at what feels like a 30-40 degree angle facing the ground and camera follows player. This doesn’t feel very optimized for VR. Fix these two things (make camera preferences adjustable and saveable?) and this may end up on my favorites because of the scale and survival/missions concept. Otherwise, can’t play further.
– Real player with 2.0 hrs in game
Desktop Tree
I really enjoy having my little tree growing on my desktop while I’m doing other things. It reminds me of the desktop games I used to have to fill time while waiting for something or just to have a little fun distraction in between working on something.
The only 2 small things that would make it even better for me would be if you could lock the tree in place, I keep moving it when I drop bugs on it. And the possibility of making the load animation when it updates invisible, because it does keep pulling my eye to the corner where I keep my tree.
– Real player with 183.4 hrs in game
It’s worth the dollar.
NEVERMIND! It’s not worth the dollar because it resets your fucking tree that you spent days growing as soon as you restart your computer! shit game do not download it’s a waste of time.
– Real player with 170.4 hrs in game
Dungeon Maze
You find yourself in a maze, dark and eerily quiet. You’re trapped. Gather enough coins, and you might be able to get out. Thing is, you’re not the only one trapped inside.
Is something breathing behind you?
Quick info:
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Objective: Find all the coins, escape the maze
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Locomotion: Teleporting
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Maze: Random each time
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Size: Not too big, quick-ish to play. You can get lost though.
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Monster: Scary
Goblet Cave
An amazing cave adventure without save points. Descend into the randomly generated cave, explore, build your escape plan, and grab the treasure!
– Real player with 2.1 hrs in game
Not my typical game, but was was fun to play. It takes both RNG and skill to finish a run or not. You will also need multiple runs for the achievements, including a good or bad ending. You do need to play with sound on though, or at least it will make it easier as the kids cry (?) and the goblet emits a spooky noise.
– Real player with 1.7 hrs in game
Inside a Star-filled Sky
The reviews come close to showing what this game is about, but it can’t show you just how good it is because what you’ll see will be different than what anyone else sees. The strategies that you will come up with will be different. It’s because your arenas will be different, your power up options will be different, and your enemies will be different. This is a different kind of game.
There are only two things about this game that some people may not like. The graphics are blocky and there is no goal other than the level you reach.
– Real player with 22.8 hrs in game
This is the soul of video games right here: one man doing all the artwork, music, and programming for a game. It’s how the industry began! The result in this case is something more unique than most corporate-funded teams would ever think of, much less dare to release.
Ever seen the movie “Existenz”? Don’t. It’s silly. See “The Thirteenth Floor” instead. It’s way better. Anyway, both movies tackle the idea of recursive realities. Inside a Star-Filled Sky puts CONTROL of that concept at the core of a gaming experience. That enemy’s too tough? Enter him, dumb-down his abilities, exit, then waste him with ease. Alternatively, enter yourself, learn Kung Fu, exit, then waste him with ease.
– Real player with 17.2 hrs in game