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Clustertruck review
Clustertruck review





clustertruck review

In the spirit of the game, you can’t equip more than two of these at once.

#CLUSTERTRUCK REVIEW PORTABLE#

Some abilities really get nuts, like the portable truck, which lets you throw a projectile and spawn your own truck out of midair. But there are also some more fun options, like a grappling hook that pulls you towards a truck, or a jetpack. You have your standard options for challenge platformers, like a double jump, a time slow, and an airdash. The amount of different abilities they’ve added to such a simple game is impressive. Here you can spend your style points on extra doodads that’ll make your trucking experience a little less intense. Once you’ve added up enough, the game will drop you by the ability shop. Considering the chaotic nature of the majority of the levels though, you’ll usually just be happy with surviving. Getting a nice stylish run overall will net you more points at the end of the level, added on to the ones you get just for completion. Doing risky maneuvers, having close calls, sprinting nonstop, getting airtime, are just some of the ways to nab points. Truck Track TricksĪs you leapfrog your way through Clustertruck’s many, many stages, you’ll earn style points, which function as the game’s currency. The game demands you pay attention to the inevitable carnage unfolding because you need to parse it to stay in the running. A single truck could be a millisecond slower on one run, and because of that, it bumps another truck earlier and sends everything flying out of wack. 10 different attempts at the same level will result in 10 different outcomes. One of the things that makes Clustertruck shine is that the trucks have an inherent randomness to them at times. Like giant floating wheels in the sky? How about jumping from one herd of trucks to another? How about a rockslide of gigantic boulders? Or an antigravity field? Clustertruck thrives on making the most out of it’s crazy but simple premise. Later levels are where things get crazier. There’s some room for forgiveness, as touching the side of a truck or snagging the back can sometimes net you that extra boost, but these are happy accidents, not something you can count on.Įarly levels are simple, with little variation other than the randomness of the trucks. Hit the ground, trees, fences, anything, and you’ve lost. You jump from truck to truck, and if you touch anything other than the truck, you die. Other ones come later, but really, that’s all you need. For abilities, you’ve got a jump, you can sprint, and at the start, that’s about it. It’s a very basic game, with its depth mostly revolving around the variety of scenarios that you and the trucks get placed in. Just remember to only try it in the game and not to try it at home.Clustertruck has an incredibly simple goal: survive the truck carnage long enough to get to the goal, a flying banner at a set distance away. Either way, Clustertruck is still a fun arcade road trip for anyone looking to try a wacky spin on a classic genre. Plus, losing a level is only a few seconds of time, so you can get right back into the action. These two things sort of cancel each other out, though, since replaying a level can be a new experience every time. Also, since the game relies so much on actual physics, and since objects on each level don't always react in exactly the same way, it's entirely possible that a fluke hit might shift an object just enough so you lose through no fault of your own. Depending on how quickly you pick up on the basics, you could complete the whole thing in only a few hours. First off, the levels are extremely short, capping out at only a couple of minutes for the more difficult levels. If nothing else, Clustertruck keeps things from getting stale.Īs much fun as you'll have with the game, Clustertruck still manages to hit a few potholes. Just when you think you've seen it all, and of course found a way around it, the next level throws a new wrench (or meteor) into the mix and you're trying to sort out a whole new way to keep from hitting the ground. The game takes a basic idea - jumping off the top of moving semi-truck trailers - and quickly turns into a physics-based nightmare, as trucks start flying off the road in all sorts of strange and inventive ways. Escher painting, and you'll be pretty close to describing Clustertruck. Now imagine that scene happening in an M.C. We've all seen that action-movie cliché where the hero leaps on top of a moving truck that's speeding through traffic, occasionally jumping from car to car to stop the bad guy. This fast-paced action game is an incredible amount of fun, even though it's based on an absurd Hollywood-like stunt premise.







Clustertruck review