WitchCrafty Review (PlayStation Vita)

Our Witchcrafty Review introduces you to this Metroidvania platformer that immerses you in a world of magic. Something strange is happening in the Kingdom – the forests are filled with predatory plants, their peace-loving peoples have taken up arms against each other, and goblins were noticed in the deep mines. The little witch has to start her journey in search of truth and answers. Who is behind all these events? Should you trust strangers along the way? Who stole the Witch’s mail? Or maybe all this is not at all what it seems.

WitchCrafty Review Pros:

  • Cartoon graphics.
  • 270MB download size.
  • Platinum trophy.
  • Action-platformer gameplay.
  • Tutorial signs show the controls.
  • Save points to find and use.
  • You can jump, double jump, attack, roll, air dash, and use magic along with a special attack.
  • Crystal’s are the game’s currency.
  • Animated character portraits in conversations.
  • Cutesy animations.
  • The map fills in as you play.
  • Hack and slash combat.
  • Plays on a 2D perspective.

WitchCrafty Review Cons:

  • Really small text.
  • Tedious to play.
  • Small initial hit points pool.
  • Checkpoints are too far apart.
  • Controls are not as tight as you would like.
  • Get new powers by collecting them at altars.
  • Metroidvania atmosphere with a huge map you can explore as you wish.
  • Lose a lot of progress as the game has only a few actual save points.
  • Frustrating to play.
  • No real guidance.
  • Tired combat.
  • Replay large parts of the game.
  • Lose map progress if you die.
  • The map is small and hard to read, doesn’t show where you are for example.

Related Post: Military Base War Review (Steam)

WitchCrafty:

Official website.

Developer: PigeonDev

Publisher: PigeonDev

Store Links –

PlayStation Vita

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!

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