Rock Boshers DX: Directorโ€™s Cut review for PS Vita, PS4

Platform: PS Vita
Also On: PS4, PC
Publisher: Tikipod
Developer: Tikipod
Medium: Digital
Players: 1-4
Online: Yes
ESRB: E10+

Rock Boshers DX: Directorโ€™s Cut is a good example of why snap judgments can so easily be wrong. When I first played the game a month ago, I was ready to dash off a few sentences about how heavily indebted it is to the early days of gaming, add in a few more about it also being a twin-stick shooter, and then call it a day.

Now that Iโ€™ve spent a great deal more time with itโ€ฆwell, Iโ€™ll still stand by my initial assessment, at least to an extent. Aesthetically, this is a game straight out of the early 1980s. Developers Tikipod have explicitly said that Rock Boshers is designed to recall the ZX Spectrum โ€” and, while I never played one of those, I did play quite a few games on the Atari 2600, and the experience here isnโ€™t too far off from that. Bright colors, blocky graphics; no one could ever mistake it for anything but a retro game.

Rock Boshers DX 1

Likewise, it fits squarely within the mold your typical twin-stick shooter. Left thumbstick moves your character around, right thumbstick shoots your weapon. It doesnโ€™t get any more straightforward than that.

And yet, itโ€™s not just a retro-aping twin-stick shooter, you know? For starters, it not as basic as, say, Crimsonland. Each level is also puzzle, and you need to work your way through it slowly โ€” with an emphasis on the โ€œslowlyโ€, since youโ€™re more than likely to die multiple times in the process of figuring everything out. Enemies appear pre-set points in each level, but those points are never obvious beforehand, which means youโ€™ll need to stumble across themโ€ฆand remember them for your next playthrough, since youโ€™ll probably die shortly after they suddenly spring into being. Rock Boshers DX doesnโ€™t have one-hit kills, but it does offer only a limited amount of life on each level. Couple that with a hit detection system thatโ€™s extremely generous to your enemies, and you can see why youโ€™re likely to die several times on your way to passing each level.

On top of that, thereโ€™s the gameโ€™s story โ€” a gloriously wacked-out tale involving a young Queen Victoria sneaking away to Mars in search of adventure. Obviously, seeing as the whole plot is conveyed via text screens, the storytelling is rather primitive, but itโ€™s still a pretty unique plot; after all, when else do you get to play as Englandโ€™s longest-reigning monarch?

Rock Boshers DX 2

Obviously, those things โ€” the crazy story, the even crazier learning curve โ€” are just extra. At its core, Rock Boshers DX is a retro-inspired twin-stick shooter, as I said. But itโ€™s also a lot more than that, and itโ€™s worth giving it a chance to find out.

Grade: B
Want to know more about our review scoring criteria? Read our Review Guidelines!