![]() It sparks no desire to push back against the gates for a victory. Unlike many roguelikes I’ve known and loved, Strafe never made me say, “One more time, I got this,” after a death. The game seems tuned to stymie progression, and the few tools you can find to assist with continual progress (like a teleporter) are a challenge to set up. My best efforts have taken me to the end of the second of four large areas, Black Canyon. I haven’t completed Strafe, and I have no desire to. This sort of variety between attempts isn’t fun or compelling the time you snag a sweet rocket launcher or unlock a secret room filled with ‘90s gaming throwbacks could be the same time you die to a random elevator crushing you. Or you can die huddled in a corner, out of ammo and clinging to your basic weapon. You can go from weak to powerful quickly if you’re lucky enough to find the right perks and weapon upgrades. You simply hope that you win the battle of random chance multiple times in succession to make your run a bit smoother, like getting health when you need it or an “upgrade” that doesn’t make your weapon worse. I enjoy challenging, masochistic games, but you gain no valuable knowledge from run to run here. Once you discover the basics of survival, you are largely left at the mercy of chance. ![]() Levels are bolted together in various ways to make every attempt different, but they’re also loaded with frustration and uncertainty. Strafe’s commitment to classic shooters is vastly overshadowed by its commitment to being a difficult roguelike. While those little gems are fun, the gameplay leaves much to be desired. Classics like Quake, Wolfenstein, and Doom serve as inspirations, but Strafe’s navel-gazing is mostly reserved to secret areas and winks, like tailored rooms with famous weapons and direct nods to these old shooters. While there are many factors going against it, Strafe successfully emulates the blood-soaked, ultra-edgy vibe of games long past. Unlike the name of the title would imply, strafing is a poor tactic in a world where silent enemies are always coming at you from the sides, making one of the more effective strategies to funnel all the enemies into a tunnel and wipe them out with your secondary-fire abilities en masse. The weapons lack weight, the encounters feel more frustrating than challenging, and the repetitive gameplay doesn’t do much to ignite the senses. It focuses on relentless combat against unending tides of foes, but it feels weak and devoid of impact. Strafe attempts to conjure up nostalgia to provide a shooting experience inspired by the FPS genre’s early greats. These piles of gore are sort of a metaphor for Strafe itself – a giant goopy mound of parts that never really work together, though you can tell there might be something neat underneath all the clutter. Whether you’re nailing opponents with head shots, sniping off limbs, or turning the entire screen into a slaughter with grenades, everything just becomes a big, bloody mess. Strafe is a fast-paced, ‘90s throwback shooter that has you running and gunning through procedurally generated levels past hordes of deadly foes.
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