About This Game A Robot Named Fight is a Metroidvania roguelike focused on exploration and item collection. Take on the role of a lone robot tasked with stopping the entity known as the Megabeast. Explore procedurally-generated labyrinths, uncover randomized power-ups and artifacts, find secrets, and blast meaty creatures in this deliciously gory Metroidvania.Millennia of peace have passed since the mechanical gods ascended and left the lower order robots to cultivate the world. Unfortunately for those left behind, something forgotten and terrible stirs amidst the stars: the Megabeast, a pulsating moon-sized orb of flesh, eyes, mouths and reproductive organs – unleashing its children onto the world like an unstoppable plague.Explore a procedurally-generated labyrinth with more than 4 billion unique runs.Prove your worth with true permadeath.Take on over 60 menacing enemies solo or with a friend via local co-op.Adapt to a different item set every run with more than 80 unique itemsComplete achievements to unlock new content.Play using your favorite controller.Enjoy an unreasonable amount of meat! 1075eedd30 Title: A Robot Named Fight!Genre: Action, IndieDeveloper:Matt Bitner GamesPublisher:Matt Bitner GamesRelease Date: 7 Sep, 2017 A Robot Named Fight! Offline Activation Keygen A Robot Named Fight! has taken me by surprise, and I'm absolutely loving everything about it.Metroidvania, procedural level generation, lots of nods and references to it's inspirations, and a fantastic artistic direction, this game has it made.. Graphics are really tight, the music is catchy, and the gameplay is overall a lot of fun. I like that despite there being set progression of zones, the map generation algorithm shuffles the items needed for progression and hazards (ie "hot zones") to make replaying the game more interesting.The biggest complaints I have are that the controls feel a little off, some of the subweapons feel useless, and it's somewhat annoying trying to find secret blocks in rooms that are marked with an unfound item. I hope to see those points get addressed, but the game is a lot of fun regardless.. A procedural metroidvania done right, A Robot Named Fight has been my addiction. I've been making sure to beat it once or twice a day. I love this game and highly recommend it.While other games attempting to mimic this type of exploration have fallen into a trap of showing their entire hand in one long go, A Robot Named Fight remains extremely replayable. Sessions last roughly 2 hours for thorough players not speed-running to one of the endings. There's a save if that's still too long. Meanwhile, key items have variants so the basic tools may change each run. For instance, a mobility upgrade could involve either a high jump, a double jump, a jet pack, or maybe even an adorable trampoline dog that fights nearby enemies and changes costumes with you but also makes you struggle to avoid stepping on it unintentionally and launching into spikes.A Robot Named Fight is also a rogue-like rather than an RPG hiding inside a metagame. Unlocks might gift a random item at the start of a run, but play involves permadeath with no permanent cross-session upgrade nonsense. This game can be beaten on the first try rather than forcing a grind in the pursuit of later fun.As of this review, the Big Wet area\/bosses could probably use some balance tweaks and there's some quality of life issues like weapon selection that could stand to be ironed out. However, these are all relatively minor and updates are still coming. The game was a bargain even before I ventured into the beta version and I'm confident in it's value now that it's released.. A procedural metroidvania done right, A Robot Named Fight has been my addiction. I've been making sure to beat it once or twice a day. I love this game and highly recommend it.While other games attempting to mimic this type of exploration have fallen into a trap of showing their entire hand in one long go, A Robot Named Fight remains extremely replayable. Sessions last roughly 2 hours for thorough players not speed-running to one of the endings. There's a save if that's still too long. Meanwhile, key items have variants so the basic tools may change each run. For instance, a mobility upgrade could involve either a high jump, a double jump, a jet pack, or maybe even an adorable trampoline dog that fights nearby enemies and changes costumes with you but also makes you struggle to avoid stepping on it unintentionally and launching into spikes.A Robot Named Fight is also a rogue-like rather than an RPG hiding inside a metagame. Unlocks might gift a random item at the start of a run, but play involves permadeath with no permanent cross-session upgrade nonsense. This game can be beaten on the first try rather than forcing a grind in the pursuit of later fun.As of this review, the Big Wet area\/bosses could probably use some balance tweaks and there's some quality of life issues like weapon selection that could stand to be ironed out. However, these are all relatively minor and updates are still coming. The game was a bargain even before I ventured into the beta version and I'm confident in it's value now that it's released.. A Robot Named Fight is unexpectedly a very solid Metroidvania. The primary question that you tend to ask when you see a game relying heavily on procedural generation is: "Why?" What does a random map bring to the game over a hand-made one? A Robot Named Fight has a really clever answer to that question: it has several alternative versions of the "key" powerups! You've run into a dead end that requires a jump you can't make, and you remember that last game, you got a high jump powerup to scale those walls. This game, however, you get a jetpack! Despite both "keys" opening the same "lock", they have totally different gameplay potential. This, I think, is where the developer managed to make the game deserving of its procedural generation.Other observations, positive and negative:+In addition to the alternate key items, there are also a wide variety of optional upgrades that show up and change combat in fun and varied ways, reminiscent of The Binding of Isaac.+The tiles used to make the map are well-done and varied, and are designed such that even encountering the same tile twice might still be a unique experience due to the type of enemies involved and the positions of the doors and hidden powerups.+The controls and movement are satisfactory, and I never felt myself blaming any platforming failures on them.+The combat feels fun, and the enemies are varied and interesting rather than recolored versions of previous ones.+There's a good sense of power escalation as you start collecting powerups for movement and combat.+The game's visual and musical style are quite good.-The map generation has too much backtracking for my liking. I'm sure it could be made to minimize that more. Most hand-made metroidvania maps tend to take the player through loops back to the main areas rather than having them run down a corridor and back.-Most of the alternate weapons feel weak or hard to use, and trying to switch to the right one in combat by cycling through the list isn't great. The main gun is almost always the best weapon, especially since it upgrades.-For some reason, dying and starting over feels worse in this game than it does in a lot of roguelikes. I think the game would be served well by an "easy mode" that makes save points last forever rather than burning out after one use.. It's basically the game you wanted that Super Metroid Randomizer to be.. To start, I suck at this game. It controls exactly like super metroid and if you know what that controlled like it was a little awkward with how you shoot and jump. I can last about 3-4 bosses in a run now. The game feels like super metroid compressed into a roguelike. I don't know how many bosses there are but each time I play, I encounter new bosses and I've never seen and have new power ups that I've unlocked and see new environments. Some rooms are the same but for the most part, it succeeds as a roguelike metroid which is very exciting to me. It is an awesome game.Edit 5\/19\/2019: After now having spent 38 hours in the game working to get all of the achievements and ultimately succeeding, I can say I no longer suck. I can consistently beat the game. In addition there are some really cool mechanics I didn't know anything about. There is a co-op mode where you can have someone come in and play an orb in a twin stick shooter kind way. The orb can get damaged so it isn't a pure upgrade and its not like having 2 robots but it is an addition I enjoyed. As you get upgrades to your shots, the orb does as well. It effectively doubles your damage output and can collect items which makes the game a lot easier. Shrines, There are shrines in this game to various mechanical gods where you can sacrifice resources for upgrades. You'll probably waste a few runs figuring them out and how to get buffs\/relics consistently. Hint: there is a number on the screen that reveals how it works while you interact with them.Anyway, the game is still awesome and I love it.Edit: 5\/25\/2019 ok so it got a new patch and I've experienced all of the new things. It appears to have changed the generation of certain rooms to make them not dead ends and made the end game a little bit more interesting. Liquids were added as an obstacle and quite a few new items were added. They are pretty cool and certainly change things up and add more customization options. Overall a really good change for free.
A Robot Named Fight! Offline Activation Keygen
Updated: Mar 17, 2020
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