If you donât mind a rather extreme challenge, I canât recommend Ape Out enough, a perfect marriage of style and execution thatâs difficult as hell while also managing to be an exciting power fantasy. Every step of the way is exciting and fun, and even when youâre running up against a wall, it has that âone more run!â power that gets you to keep trying, and then whoops, hours are gone. Ape Out is definitely worth checking out and returning to for a quick and excellent experience.
Ape Out is a masterpiece of desperate, reactive play that not only gets you to behave like a rampaging gorilla, it forces you to adapt like one.
Ape Out is that rare mix of great art, sound and game design. Itâs a short but addictive experience with challenging, satisfying gameplay and an audiovisual style that instantly grabs your senses and doesnât let go.
While the procedural generation makes it slip on a banana peel somewhat, the rest of Ape Out is such a stylistic and hyperviolent joy that you can't but be charmed by it - even the jazz.
Ape Out is grueling. Constantly, all in movement and speed, the game will make you live something very satisfying. It is like a little walk before turning into a jam-session that will seem very messy from a distance, for the uninitiated. You'll enjoy replaying it, in the manner of a single good vinyl.
Ape Out parades the alliance between thunderous jazz and an irritated bloodthirsty gorilla. Two unrelated objects defined by being out of control are both under your control in the form of a violent top-down brawler. Symbols crash when gorillas and humans clash and the performance is beautiful and preposterous.
Mashing up unique aesthetics and gameplay doesn't always yield a perfect result, and Ape Out tries to fit together two disparate ideas without successfully navigating the challenges of such an endeavor. Too many elements just don't work at a fundamental level, making it an uneven effort at best.
February 4, 2019
Ape Out is delayed to the 28th February 2019. Watch video