Quantcast

Electron Hut: Kyle Bedell’s Blog

Human factors, gaming, and mobile technology

Audiosurf: Ride Your Music

with 2 comments

EH - Audiosurf

Every year, the Independent Games Festival holds a competition to “reward innovation in independent games,” giving recognition to titles developed by single people or small groups. In particular, the IGF focuses on games that break from the standard genres; the titles that usually win bring something new to the table. Today, I’ll be looking at the grand prize winner for 2008: a title recently picked up on the Steam distribution service called Audiosurf.

A fusion of racing, puzzle, and music games, Audiosurf is unique in that it builds its tracks based on music files on your computer. While there are a variety of game modes, the basic gist of Audiosurf is to create clusters of blocks of the same color by running them over. The more you string together, the more points you get. “Hot” colors like red and orange grant more points than “cool” colors like blue or white. The shape and intensity of each track is determined by analyzing a song; fast, hectic tunes lead to downsloping, block-laden tracks while slow, mellow songs slope upward and have fewer blocks. All of this has to be accomplished while avoiding grey blocks; hit too many and you’ll lose a slew of points when your futuristic “car” explodes. Since the song the track is based on plays through to the end, any time your car explodes it will automatically “reconstruct” itself after a set period of time. However, you won’t be able to pick up colored blocks in the interim, so be careful!

There are fourteen different game modes available in Audiosurf, although only six of them are unique. The other eight are permutations of the six main game modes, offering increased difficulty for players looking for a challenge. For a relaxing time, try Mono mode which only has two colors of blocks to contend with. Looking for a challenge? Try Double V mode where you have two cars to control at once. More competitive individuals will be thrilled to hear that there are high-score boards for each game mode and song title, so you can track your performance against others from across the globe.

There’s enough variety in the gameplay to hold your attention, but combined with a huge music library Audiosurf should remain a part of your gaming library for months to come. Anyone who is looking for a quirky alternative to the cookie-cutter titles plaguing the gaming market should consider Audiosurf as a refreshing alternative.

Written by Kyle

February 24th, 2008 at 11:04 pm

Posted in Electron Hut, Games, Reviews

2 Responses to 'Audiosurf: Ride Your Music'

Subscribe to comments with RSS or TrackBack to 'Audiosurf: Ride Your Music'.

  1. It’s a cool game, but it’s a real shame it crashes on me every… 2 minutes , and forces me to restart my computer.

    Katherine

    26 Feb 08 at 8:40 am

  2. Mmmh, looks interesting, and I’m certainly curious to see how it’d handle some of my more eclectic tastes, such as Dr. Steel or Godspeed You Black Emperor. I might give it a poke when the finances aren’t so stretched. :3

    Gravecat

    26 Feb 08 at 10:25 pm

Leave a Reply