20°
7.0

Party of Sin Review at CalmDownTom

The game begins with all the sins being imprisoned in a high security prison in Hell guarded by both angels and demons. One of the sins (Wrath) manages to break out and starts a riot. This Minotaur-like creature head-butts the cell door and begins to free all the other sins. By the end of the first two levels the whole party gets assembled and the player has at his disposal Wrath, Greed, Gluttony, Envy, Pride, Lust and Sloth.

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calmdowntom.com
10°

Bundle Stars – Delirium Bundle

Hey folks, one more bundle full of some great games and indie titles for that rainy day.

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anythinggeekyreviewed.co.uk
40°

[Continue-Play]Review - Party of Sin

Alex Harrison takes a look at Party of Sin, a story of an indie game being funded successfully, raising over 200% of what Crankshaft Games required to take this idea to production. But does it guide us to gaming salvation or leave us in damnation of another average puzzle platformer?

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continue-play.com
40°
3.0

Review: Party of Sin (Pixel Judge)

Indie and a platformer aren’t the words that inspire confidence. While some people like platforming – and I don’t judge them too harshly – personally I view it as something that takes place instead of actual fun gameplay, i.e. shooting. Unless it’s Mirror’s Edge, which was cool. But Party of Sin is closer to Mario than to parkouring Asian curriers and, while trying to emulate Trine, does it come any close or fails, crashes and burns, much like Lucifer?

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pixeljudge.com