Bossa are still tweaking the recipe - and hopefully using their loaves and looking at player feedback - and will hopefully come up with something a bit tastier in the months before final release. As a result, repetition can soon set in, turning parts of the game into routine, if tricky, navigation chores. Hammering the war buttons to get somewhere safe rarely results in a quick enough reaction (we're not sure of the exact neurological response time of bread in the wild, but we're guessing: slow), and you'll inevitably restart levels far more often than you'd like. As you foul your slice by falling to to floor or dropping in cat poop - and you will do both of those, likely many times - the rapidly depleting edibility meter is accompanied by a maddening warning noise that distracts and annoys. Even if you can buy into the wry faux-enthusiasm of "OMG bread game!!!11!" you'll find the frustration mounts a little too much. However, the appeal of awkwardly lumbering bread around does start to wear thin after a while, especially if the meta-joke of the game fails to resonate with you. How is this related to mobile bread? Spoilers, sweetdough, but it's a very strange direction. Delivered through medical reports and environmental clues, a very depressed Mr Murton is suffering paranoid delusions, convinced that the city council deliberately targeted his business for closure. To probably everybody's amazement - even those who made it - I am Bread does have a story to tell too. The environment itself is both ally and enemy, and in the absence of actual enemies, it really changes how you start to think about the game world. Tasty, toast enhancing condiments such as butter and jam give score multipliers, while landing on the floor or getting into the mess left on a counter diminishes your deliciousness. Not YouTuber bait.\” Youve seen a slice of the game.As you flip and fling your way around, you're rewarded or penalised for what you slop on your slice. Kotaku – \”The most surprising thingĪbout I Am Bread is just how much of an actual \’game\’ it is\” Nerdģ – \”Is it worth the money? Yes, very much so. Michael Jones, Rooster Teeth – I am Bread is a fantastic game. Release Date : 04/2015 Protection : Steam Zero-G: Literally bread in space! Make studious use of your bread boosters as you manoeuvre across environments with no gravity, avoiding all the floating hazards this entails in Zero-G mode.įree-play: Explore the world and play as any of the bread types you have unlocked, having crumby fun in your own sweet time. Rampage: Cause as much destruction as possible throughout the house as you smash everything in sight as (possibly) angry baguette. Can you find all the pieces before you crack up?īagel Race: Satisfy your taste for speed and bagels as you race across the checkpoints in each level and complete the tracks in the fastest possible time. Story Mode: Embark on an epic journey to become toast! Take on all hazards to deliciousness as you embark on your adventure throughout the home of an unsuspecting owner: from the kitchen, through the house, to the lounge, and then venture outside into the garden and beyond.Ĭheese Hunt: Realise the destiny of crisp-bread as you hunt down pieces of cheese to smother yourself in. Oh, and did we mention bread goes into space too? Additional game modes and other types of bread will cater for all tastes! Set speed records racing across the levels as a bagel realise your destiny as crispbread in cheese hunt mode relieve your stress as the baguette and smash everything in sight in rampage mode. In addition to the deepest story ever seen in a videogame, about a slice of bread, there are a wealth of baked options to sink your teeth into. This bread will be boldly going where no other bread has gone before. Take the intrepid, crumby adventurer on a journey from his natural confines of the kitchen, through the home of an unsuspecting owner and into the outside world. From the creators of Surgeon Simulator comes its prequel – an adventure with a hero like no other! ‘I am Bread’ is the epic story of a slice of bread’s journey to become toast.
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