Pyro Jump is a platform independent game and the new project of the french game studio Pinpin Team and Noveo. The love within Pyro Jump: Pyro Jump is the story of a little flame called Pyro, who falls in love with a paper puppet and decides to run after her through this weird and outrageous world full of rolling and dangerous wheels.
“Love can burn everything to the ground…” Your goal: Chase the Princess! Simple, isn’t it? Not at all… In order to catch her, you will have to confront the 100 levels filled of different and dangerous wheels disturbing the way between you and the princess. …and in the meanwhile, get to know this impossible love story between a paper princess
We'd like to ask everyone to vote for our game and help us get approved to sell PYRO JUMP on Steam.
Voting on Greenlight doesn't commit you to buying anything. To cast your vote, you don't need to install the Steam client, but Greenlight requires you to be a Steam customer.
All you need to do is go to our Steam Greenlight page for PYRO JUMP, and click "Yes" under "Would you buy this game if it were available in Steam?" That's it.
So, please give us your votes, encourage your friends to do the same, and help us bring our games to a new audience, and make even better games for you in the future!
With your support, our game will be available on PC, MAC and Linux, and we will create exclusive content for these platforms.
Pyro Jump is a platformer that has you controlling Pyro, a cute little fire guy in pursuit of his ideal woman: Princess Paper. What that means for you is that you have to guide Pyro across the game’s many levels by tapping on your screen to tell him when to jump. He’s made of fire, so he sticks to everything because science has no place in cartoony platformers.
If you only care about getting to the end, you can. But teh hardcorez have two ways to test their skills. Each level includes time and collection goals to reward players who want to look for the most efficient route and collect all the tiny flames along the way.
It’s fun. When I don’t hate it.
And with those challenges just sitting there in front of you, why wouldn’t you try for them? Why shouldn’t it bother you when you miss your timing by a split second and don’t pick up one of those collectibles?
If it doesn’t, I envy you, but The Quest for the Perfect Run is a powerful draw, and once you start it, you realize how annoyingly picky Pyro Jump is. Gold-medal times require near perfection with little margin for error, and collecting every item means figuring the exact tiny angle at which Pyro must leap from rotating platforms.
Obviously challenges should be, you know, challenging, but it feels like a bit much, even for my obsessive-compulsive brain.
A platform game that requires great dexterity and precision, Pyro Jump involves taking control of a fireball who has to journey across a series of wheels in order to reach the end of the level and rescue Princess Paper. In typical platform gaming style, as soon as the player has come to grips with the controls (which involve no more than a simple tap on the screen when executing a jump), each level continues to increase in difficulty as more hazardous wheels and jeopardizing obstacles are introduced.
If Pyro has a particularly nasty fall or accidentally jumps headfirst into some deadly spikes, he floats off to the heavens and players have to retry the level from the beginning. What makes this further challenging is that if I literally have reached the end of the level and unintentionally end up jumping past the princess into the abyss, I’ll have to retry the level all over again. That said, each level is short and, in retrospect, doesn’t take too long to complete. But it’s the main slog of having to restart continuously by messing up that adds to the overall time spent playing.
To keep things more exciting, each of the 100 or so levels have a series of time trial scores that players can attempt to beat in order to retrieve a gold, silver, or bronze medal. As an added bonus in terms of replayability, players can return to this even after collecting all the flames and getting the three-star rating for each level. Furthermore, it’s a fantastic reason to challenge friends and try and outdo the overall best time.
“Love can burn everything to the ground…” Your goal: Chase the Princess! Simple, isn’t it? Not at all… In order to catch her, you will have to confront the 100 levels filled of different and dangerous wheels disturbing the way between you and the princess. …and in the meanwhile, get to know this impossible love story between a paper princess
pyro Jump for Nokia,iPhone,Blackbeery and iHone collection and the review are available on craplore.comGoing multi-platform
We'd like to ask everyone to vote for our game and help us get approved to sell PYRO JUMP on Steam.
Voting on Greenlight doesn't commit you to buying anything. To cast your vote, you don't need to install the Steam client, but Greenlight requires you to be a Steam customer.
All you need to do is go to our Steam Greenlight page for PYRO JUMP, and click "Yes" under "Would you buy this game if it were available in Steam?" That's it.
So, please give us your votes, encourage your friends to do the same, and help us bring our games to a new audience, and make even better games for you in the future!
With your support, our game will be available on PC, MAC and Linux, and we will create exclusive content for these platforms.
Pyro Jump is a platformer that has you controlling Pyro, a cute little fire guy in pursuit of his ideal woman: Princess Paper. What that means for you is that you have to guide Pyro across the game’s many levels by tapping on your screen to tell him when to jump. He’s made of fire, so he sticks to everything because science has no place in cartoony platformers.
If you only care about getting to the end, you can. But teh hardcorez have two ways to test their skills. Each level includes time and collection goals to reward players who want to look for the most efficient route and collect all the tiny flames along the way.
It’s fun. When I don’t hate it.
And with those challenges just sitting there in front of you, why wouldn’t you try for them? Why shouldn’t it bother you when you miss your timing by a split second and don’t pick up one of those collectibles?
If it doesn’t, I envy you, but The Quest for the Perfect Run is a powerful draw, and once you start it, you realize how annoyingly picky Pyro Jump is. Gold-medal times require near perfection with little margin for error, and collecting every item means figuring the exact tiny angle at which Pyro must leap from rotating platforms.
Obviously challenges should be, you know, challenging, but it feels like a bit much, even for my obsessive-compulsive brain.
A platform game that requires great dexterity and precision, Pyro Jump involves taking control of a fireball who has to journey across a series of wheels in order to reach the end of the level and rescue Princess Paper. In typical platform gaming style, as soon as the player has come to grips with the controls (which involve no more than a simple tap on the screen when executing a jump), each level continues to increase in difficulty as more hazardous wheels and jeopardizing obstacles are introduced.
If Pyro has a particularly nasty fall or accidentally jumps headfirst into some deadly spikes, he floats off to the heavens and players have to retry the level from the beginning. What makes this further challenging is that if I literally have reached the end of the level and unintentionally end up jumping past the princess into the abyss, I’ll have to retry the level all over again. That said, each level is short and, in retrospect, doesn’t take too long to complete. But it’s the main slog of having to restart continuously by messing up that adds to the overall time spent playing.
To keep things more exciting, each of the 100 or so levels have a series of time trial scores that players can attempt to beat in order to retrieve a gold, silver, or bronze medal. As an added bonus in terms of replayability, players can return to this even after collecting all the flames and getting the three-star rating for each level. Furthermore, it’s a fantastic reason to challenge friends and try and outdo the overall best time.







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