Hike, climb, and soar through the peaceful mountainside landscapes of Hawk Peak Provincial Park. Follow the marked trails or explore the backcountry as you make your way to the summit. Along the way, meet other hikers, discover hidden treasures, and take in the world around you.
Key FeaturesEx...
Hike, climb, and soar through the peaceful mountainside landscapes of Hawk Peak Provincial Park. Follow the marked trails or explore the backcountry as you make your way to the summit. Along the way, meet other hikers, discover hidden treasures, and take in the world around you.
Key Features
Explore the island any way you like. Choose your own path to follow and see where it leads you. You never know what you might stumble into!
Hike at your own pace — there’s no need to rush to the summit! Take your time fishing along the river banks or swimming by the lakeshore.
Collect hidden treasures to reach new heights. Try taking a dive off the mountain peaks to soar above the forests.
Chat with the other hikers you meet along your route. You might be able to help each other out!
Listen to a lush original soundtrack by Mark Sparling that progresses dynamically as you explore the wilderness.
You play as a bird taking vacation on an island. Exploring, talking to the other birds and helping them out, hiking and flying, everything is made for you to let go. The control a fluid as hell, the sentation of flying espacially after a little while when you have some upgrade is awesome. The pixel art is nicely done. Same for the music. The characters are written with humor.
If you're looking for a cute little game to chill without worries that's the game. A short Hike for a short and relaxing little game.
A Short Hike is an example of master-class game design from an indie developer. The gameplay is easy to get a handle on but not condescendingly simplistic, the platforming is solid and surprisingly free of bugs, and there's a startling amount of depth to this world. Hawk Peak Provincial Park (that's "state park" for those wearing Canada as a hat) is well-designed, and an absurd amount of diversity in the landscape makes playing A Short Hike an absolute joy.
A short list of everything I loved about this game:
-Characters are simple and easy to remember, and they always seem to be easy to find despite freely roaming around the park
-Everyone talks like they're conversing in Twitter DMs, which is cute as heck
-The lack of a map of any kind is offset by Hawk Peak's intuitive design, an optional compass, and directional signs that are just frequent enough to prevent you from getting lost
-The sheer variety of gameplay elements echoes some of the best open-world games (most reminiscent of Animal Crossing, but with its own flavor) without feeling cluttered
-The size of pixels on-screen (for the feaux-retro look I love so much) can be adjusted all the way from "thick and crunchy" to "small and tasty"
-Native Linux installation available!
-A vast array of options catering to every playstyle. Want to speedrun the plot? Go for it! Want to challenge yourself and finish the hike with as few golden feathers as possible? You can! Wanna bum around the park and earn a bunch of golden feathers, making the hike a breeze? Sure thing!
-Many of the characters display surprising depth, despite their dialogue limited to tiny chunks. Pay attention to the kid selling golden feathers for an exorbitant rate... his story might be a bit of a test of humility.
-Plays flawlessly without any configuration on Steam Deck
-So much more I don't have room for!
Don't let the length of the main plotline fool you: A Short Hike is anything but. Trust me: you WILL find something to love about this game.
Usually these sorts of casual games don't have enough gameplay or interesting level design to keep me interested, but the game world is great fun to explore, and there's just enough of a challenge to the various objectives to stay engaging while still being a very chill experience.
Beautiful, charming, challenging and achievable game that every six to ten year old should play.
Accurate controls, responsive graphics.
Complete, encapsulated, safe world for kids to explore.
No violence. You even get to help someone go to college if you're really kind.