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  • Seen@GDC Europe: Achtung Arcade is a little box of fun

    by 
    Sinan Kubba
    Sinan Kubba
    08.19.2013

    Stowed literally in a corner of GDC Europe 2013 is Achtung Arcade, an adorable miniature machine put together by the man who made McPixel, the game notable both for being the first Steam Greenlight success to make it to Valve's portal, and for being bonkers. Just like McPixel, Achtung Arcade is kind of out there. Achtung Arcade is based around 17 of Mikolaj Kaminski's Flash games, mostly weird game jam creations like Ninjanoids - which is exactly what it sounds like, Asteroids with ninjas instead of meteors - and Spy Trouble, a platformer with lots of deadly lasers. The cabinet includes a grand total of 505 variations of the 17 games, with different versions featuring changes like "glitchy pixels" and different skins. "I don't have any game in the works as far as to be able to show it at expos or events. I decided to put an arcade machine that can house all my small games and Flash games," Kaminski told us. "These kind of games are way different from the big games that you make. Flash games, the games that you don't have to worry about them being good, or marketable. These are just games, that we love." Most of Achtung Arcade's 17 games are available on Kaminski's website, but some are exclusive to the device, like the aptly named Number 2, a game that sees you guide fecal matter through a line of intestine while trying not to touch the sides. (Don't pooh-pooh it before you've tried it.) Achtung Arcade made its debut at a Berlin game show earlier this year; Kaminski plans to add more exclusives to it, and even hopes other game makers will add their own creations to it as he continues to tour it wherever he can. Will Kaminski bring it to Gamescom this week? At the moment he doesn't have a booth, but he's hoping someone will let him find somewhere to put Achtung Arcade. After all, as he pointed out, it's not like it takes up much space.

  • Humble Android Bundle 6 adds McPixel, Waking Mars, NightSky HD

    by 
    Jessica Conditt
    Jessica Conditt
    06.25.2013

    The sixth Humble Bundle with Android just added three more reasons to throw down some cash: McPixel, Waking Mars and NightSky HD. All three games are available for PC, Mac, Linux and Android devices. The new games join Frozen Synapse and Broken Sword: Director's Cut behind the "more than the average" paywall (the average is currently below $5). Meanwhile, Aquaria, Fractal, Organ Trail: Director's Cut, Stealth Bastard Deluxe and Pulse are all available for any price you desire. McPixel, Waking Mars and NightSky HD come with their soundtracks, just as the other games do. Those who have already purchased a bundle can access these new games from their Humble Bundle download pages. The complete bundle is now valued at $120, and as always customers can dole out their money among charities (Child's Play and the EFF), the developers or Humble Bundle itself. The Humble Bundle program has raised more than $13.7 million for charity to date. Humble Android Bundle 6 is live for seven more days.

  • McPixel is the first Greenlight game available on Steam

    by 
    JC Fletcher
    JC Fletcher
    09.26.2012

    As a pioneer of the Steam Greenlight program, there couldn't have been a more random choice than McPixel. The hilarious, absurd adventure game-meets-WarioWare exercise in preventing explosions is the first Greenlight game to make it to Steam, where it's available now for $4.99.McPixel is a series of 100 scenarios in which the player has 20 seconds to "prevent stuff from blowing up using available tools." It was recently featured in one of the custom arcade cabinets at Fantastic Arcade, where it benefited from an even more context-free presentation and could thus confuse people who didn't know what they were playing at all.