Pitiri 1977

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(List price: £5.99)
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GAME SUMMARY

Pitiri 1977

Rating: 3.7 (36 votes cast)

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Pitiri is a platformer, which is paying tribute to its classic predecessors – not only by its gameplay, but also by its background story. A narrative, that is set in 1977 (the glorious year of Star Wars IV, the Voyager 1 spacecraft & Led Zeppelin's “Presence”), in an imposing world, created by using hand-painted graphics, interesting characters and solid physics.
Your player character's name is Eli, whose brother has been kidnapped on his birthday. He wasn't taken by men, but by a strange being, a monster from unknown origin. The adventure starts as you pick up the scent and try to track down the monster and retrieve your little brother. To your advantage, Eli isn't a normal kid, but has several supernatural powers at his disposal. Abilities he will need, in order to survive the dangerous realms you will make him venture into – strange places, a twisted 70s science fiction world, that lies beyond the known …

GAME FEATURES

  • A solid Physics Engine
  • Story driven gameplay
  • Stylish 70´s Setting
  • Hand-painted Levels, Characters and Objects
  • Dynamic Soundengine
  • Cool 70s Soundtrack
  • 5 supernatural Abbilities
  • Includes the Soundtrack for Download

 

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System Requirements

    • System: Microsoft® Windows® XP / Vista / 7 (Tested on Windows 7)
    • Processor: 1.5GHz oder schneller
    • Ram: 512 MB oder mehr
    • Hd: 200 MB oder mehr
    • Videocard: Pixel Shader 2.0
    • DirectX® Version: DirectX® 9.0c

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REVIEWS

Happy to have played it

By pudding posted 28th April

Pitiri 1977 is a platformer done in a very unique style. It is exactly its setting and visuals that drew me to it. The game mechanics are simple and fine but, in my opinion, the game is somewhat lacking in substance - especially regarding *puzzle* platforming when it seemed to set itself up for that. Usually moveable objects are kind of hyperactive and difficult to manipulate. The game displayed some buggy behaviour a couple of times. Once it crashed after a long, difficult part and I had to start way back at the last savepoint. That certainly caused some frustration.

Now for the twist: despite all the above, I'm happy that I bought Pitiri 1977. There's something special about it. The visual style works very well and the music is good (you get the soundtrack with the game - it's short but pleasing). I think the developers managed to create a distinctive feel and I can actually see myself playing Pitiri 1977 again, just to be there. I would recommend Pitiri 1977 if you like to collect interesting games. It's strangely precious in its own way.

Not bad

By TheJabberwock posted 25th January

Pitiri 1977 is definitely worth a play the next time you've run out of 2D side-scroll puzzle platformers and need a fix. Just don't expect another Limbo or Vessel or NyxQuest. That being said, I really enjoyed the unique concept and design. I was born in 1979, but the game still managed to induce an immediate sense of nostalgia. Of course most 80's kids like me did play a lot of 70's arcade games on our parents' Atari 2600 and watched plenty of 70's movies and reruns back in the days of only three networks and maybe thirty cable channels if you were lucky. So I might be more familiar with the era than someone born ten or twenty years later. Either way, like a good period film, it draws you in with atmosphere. Even younger gamers will enjoy the retro style and classic sci-fi references. There's a kid playing with a toy X-Wing fifteen seconds into the intro, and the accompanying Nugent-esque guitar riffs are excellent. Not that the gameplay depends at all on the set design or the constant Star Wars and Led Zeppelin references. It's just a really nice touch.

In fact, the gameplay, while still fun, is a bit less praise worthy in my opinion. The mechanics can get a little frustrating. The game relies entirely on a handful of abilities accumulated throughout the game, such as floating, catching fire, rolling into a ball, etc. They each add their own creative element to the game, but switching between them at just the right moment is sometimes hard to time, and more often than not, these abilities serve only as means to getting around the level. Knowing to curl into a ball to get through a narrow tunnel or floating above every fan you see isn't really puzzle solving. Which is fine I guess. Mario wasn't big with the problem solving, and Sonic never stacked any boxes to get where he was going either.

Speaking of which, the physics engine is somewhat over-reactive. Touch an object and it falls. Stand dead-center on a box or you'll just roll it over. Oddly though, unlike as in Limbo, and Pitiri does everything it can to compare itself to Limbo, you won't need the majority of the movable objects. I don't even know why they're there. It's also difficult to tell the difference between platforms and background, making it easy to miss secret passages and Easter eggs. This is especially true in the darker basement levels. Lastly, after a while you'll start to wish they'd places a few more save points than they did. Dying toward the end of a slow-moving water level can be very frustrating. All that said though, I would recommend Pitiri 1977. It's problems are mostly nitpicky, and I rather enjoyed it.

Pitiri 1977 review

By VisitntX posted 16th September 2012

I bought the game because it looks like a classic jump and run platformer, but set in a beautiful world draw by hand. The ambience, set in the 70's, the music, the colors. Is just a must have, and then the gameplay works perfectly as it's supposed to.

The physics of the game are well programmed, the level design is clever. The history, not so, but it works and drives the game.

Pitiri 1977 review

By olavce posted 14th July 2012

I downloaded this game just because it looked cute.

Looks can be deceiving though and after I started playing this game I found this out the hard way.

The graphics of the game are nicely done. Everything looks coherent and colors are subtle but well in place for the game. It all looks like a dreamy fantasy world.

Gameplay is easy and straight forward. Only buttons to use are the arrow keys, S and D. And although this is very simple the game itself is quiet challenging. Most you do is walk and jump but the developers have made the world tricky enough not just to run through the game and finish it in 5 minutes.

Although aimed probably at kids this game can be fun for adults as well as the levels are challenging enough and the game itself is fun.

I recommend this game to anybody and for a $5.99 it is a bargain for the fun you'll have with it ;)

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