Some were as simple as moving an item to stand on and others were either a bit more complicated or required a degree of finesse. Whilst BirdGut is primarily a platformer, it does feature a number of puzzles with a range of difficulty. One of the game’s puzzles involving rotating a maze in order to acquire fuel. They were varied and utilised well, complementing the style and gameplay. Sound effects ranged from jolly and adorable bee footsteps to the grinding, clanking racket of gears and machinery and the frantic sounds of weapons and explosions. The music was mostly pleasant, almost calming at times, but it intensified and became more frantic during the more dramatic parts of the game. However, the cute, hand-drawn images work really well with the game’s overall tone and its subtle humour making the art-style one of the game’s strongest features. The game’s visuals are simplistic, 2D, black and white, with a touch of red for things such as lasers and to indicate interaction opportunities. The Bee’s rejection at the start of the game! Styling The protagonist is ironically immune to the indoctrination due to the very ‘defect’ that caused it’s fellow insects to shun the poor bee.
#Birdgut music full
The bird’s insides are full of other bugs, but they’re all brainwashed, working at curious mechanical factories that exist instead of organs creating an interesting and unpredictable environment, with different body parts representing the various levels. As if that weren’t tragic enough, you are then eaten by a large bird whilst waiting in-line at the bug unemployment centre. You play as a bee, born different from the rest of its hive and subsequently exiled. BirdGut is a charming but challenging puzzle-platformer set inside the internal organs of a bird.