Bone Marrow Review (PlayStation 5)

This Bone Marrow Review introduces you to this game in the genre of role-playing board logic puzzles. During a certain time, combine the figures, increase your characteristics and do away with evil but consider the wrong step can lead to irreversible consequences!

Bone Marrow Review

Bone Marrow Review Pros:

  • Nice pixel art graphics.
  • 138.1MB download size.
  • Platinum trophy.
  • 3 characters – Agyid (female) and Bernard (male). The third character has to be unlocked.
  • Sliding tiles action puzzle gameplay.
  • Uses the mechanics of games like 3s and 2048. You slide tiles around and when they match they combine to get better.
  • Day/night cycle works as during one you can move pieces around and the other you can move your character over pieces and collect them.
  • Collect food for health, shield for defense, and weapons for attack strength.
  • Hitting into the enemy character does both yours and his attacks at the same time.
  • A clever spin on the genre.
  • One life.
  • Simple controls.
  • Good medieval soundtrack.
  • Two-player local support.
  • Your character sheet shows current gear equipped and stats. Your gear and stats change after the day/night changes.
  • The day and night cycle has a bar that shows the current time of day.
  • You move your opponents as you move and they collect what they stand on.
  • Difficult.
  • Four locations to unlock.

Bone Marrow Review

Bone Marrow Review Cons:

  • Rubbish brief tutorial.
  • Takes a lot of getting used to.
  • No settings for controls or making it easier to read the numbers on tiles.
  • Difficult.
  • Very repetitive.
  • No online play.

Related Post: Synth Riders Review (PlayStation VR)

Bone Marrow:

Official website.

Developer: Huge Pixel

Publisher: Ratalaika Games

Store Links –

Xbox

PlayStation

Nintendo

Steam

Jim Smale

Gaming since the Atari 2600, I enjoy the weirdness in games counting Densha De Go and RC De Go as my favourite titles of all time. I prefer gaming of old where buying games from a shop was a thing, Being social in person was a thing. Join me as I attempt to adapt to this new digital age!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.