Moons of Darsalon is a gloriously silly game about rescuing astronauts

April 21, 2023
Comments off
110 Views

Few players relish the thought of escort missions nowadays, but there was a time when developers built best-selling games around the act of saving NPCs, from Lemmings to Abe’s Odyssey. Moons of Darsalon, out now on Steam after a whopping eight years in development, is an immediately delightful homage to that kinder era. In this level-based 2D platformer from Spanish developer Dr Kucho, you play a spaceperson sent to rescue a bunch of other spacepeople from a collection of small but very intense alien planets, shepherding them to a base using simple “follow me” or “go here” commands.

Your other tools include a flashlight for underground exploration, a laser rifle which can be used to tunnel through certain materials, and a soil cannon which lets you blob together bridges, a la Prey 2017’s gloo gun. Some levels have gates that require a certain number of spacepeople to unlock, and there’s usually one or two hidden inside a hillside or similar, given away by a plaintive speech bubble as you pass.

It’s a blend of retro styles. The CRT overlay and fidgety, layered backdrops are pure 16-bit side-scroller, while the chintzy 3D spaceships look like Netscape loading icons upgraded into UFOs. In the hands, it feels a bit like a great Flash game from the late noughties, with a surprisingly in-depth physics system and a level editor waiting in the wings. But the tapering, floppy characters and bobbly, Happy Meal terrain also evoke Earthworm Jim – as does the game’s sense of humour, which consists partly of meta jokes such as hurrying home for “pizza and PS4”, but mostly of things going terribly awry.

Read more

Comments are closed.