Survive 'n' Risk
Unsurprisingly, the point of Survive 'n' Risk is to, well, survive and take risks. Your stickman earns points and cash by lasting a minute or more in an arena of death, filled with a raucous crowd, a JumboTron, funky music, and the familiar manic "dude" announcer praising your moves. Controls take advantage of both the mouse and keyboard this time, making it easier to jump from platform to platform while avoiding various flying enemies, projectiles, killer robot dogs, and the obligatory pit o' spikes. Like before, you can click to employ a parachute to slow down your descents, or double click to send your stickman zipping to your mouse's location. To avoid overuse, these skills now require energy, which recharges when not in use. Like in Rock 'n' Risk, you can choose to make the stages more difficult (and riskier) by adding more time, less platforms, more enemies, or fewer lives. More risk means more cash if you complete the stage, and more cash means more hats.
Hats and minigames are new additions to Survive 'n' Risk. Your stickman's jumping, floating, and energy abilities are affected by the type of stylish headgear he wears. Cash lets you buy one of three different "hat boxes," each randomly containing at least 2 hats of increasing rarity. There are dozens of kitschy hats, many with clever names (a plunger hat is called "Mario's Tool"). Some levels are made much easier or harder depending on what hat you happen to be wearing at the time. Additionally, the game features optional minigames in between levels to earn more cash. These games require you to grab as much cash as possible, and can get progressively harder the longer you survive.
Some survival games can be too easy, too hard, or just plain boring. Thankfully Survive 'n' Risk is none of these; With its improved controls, deeper gameplay, and variable difficulty, the game can actually leave you feeling a sense of accomplishment, especially after narrowly beating a level with all the risks attached. The game's groovy soundtrack, smooth animation, and humorous headwear are a plus, and though it might have benefitted from more levels, moving platforms, and maybe a storyline, I think I can say (without too much risk) that Survive 'n' Risk is a fun distraction and a solid casual game.
Nice Meaning of Life reference! Monty Python FTW!
Dear Casual Game Developer,
Mouse+Keyboard = nobody on a laptop/netbook with a touchpad is going to load your game even once. Thought we'd established that already.
You can use just mouse...
@littlelight why should games have to use a more limited control scheme because you won't get a mouse for your laptop?
They let you use A/D for left and right... It's not really a problem with a touchpad, so both of your arguments are moot.
Having said that, I DO NOT appreciate my character coming to a full stop after walking between green platforms with the same vertical coordinate. He doesn't even stop when you fall onto a green platform, so why would he stop if you walked onto one? The whole mechanism makes adding certain combinations of risks impossible to navigate.
Wow, thanks for this cool review :D
And thanks for all the feedbacks.
@LittleLight I am aware of this problem and also the problem that even the mouse only control may be problematic with the touchpad, but I think that only this control scheme gives you the freedom I want to achieve in the N Risk games.
@littlelight
Speak for yourself, n00bcakes. I play all my games on a laptop with no mouse, and I slay fools. Can play games like Bioshock, Half-Life, Fallout 3 on my MBP with WASD and touchpad all day. Lvl up your dexterity and quit giving bad advice to devs....
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