Sunday, June 2, 2013

A Smartly Scoped Auto-Runner

The Button Affair is a side-scrolling platformer where the player-controlled character, Enzo Gabriel, is constantly running to the right.  As a player, you have limited control over Enzo's positioning on the screen, but you are in control of actions that allow Enzo to overcome the many deadly obstacles that litter his path to freedom.

I generally don't care for auto-runners.  I can't count how many endless runners on iOS I've abandoned.  I played and enjoyed BIT.TRIP Runner, but that enjoyment was fleeting, and I put it down after playing it for less than 90 minutes.  I loved the ways in which the music was so intimately tied to my actions in BIT.TRIP Runner, but the levels quickly became frustratingly hard, and the game lacked any kind of checkpoint system.  When I died, I was forced to play the level from the beginning.  I died often.

To me, The Button Affair is a less interesting game than BIT.TRIP Runner, but unlike BIT.TRIP Runner, The Button Affair did not outstay it's welcome.  The game consists of only three levels, and each level has a generous checkpoint system.  To a certain extent, all auto-runners not utilizing random level generation require some amount of trial and error from the player.  The Button Affair is no different, and I died numerous times before I was familiar enough with the level to progress past it.  When I died however, I was dropped back to the last checkpoint terminal, and was spared the frustration of having to commit the entire level to memory.

The Button Affair does experiment with a few novel features as far as auto-runners go.  First, the player has some amount of control over Enzo's velocity.  Pressing the right arrow speeds Enzo up, pressing the left arrow slows Enzo down, and in certain situations, releasing the right arrow stops Enzo completely.  Second, when Enzo reaches a checkpoint in a level, the player must input a specific pattern of keys to progress.  Neither feature is revolutionary, but they added enough variety to the gameplay to keep me interested through to the end.

Finally, the level of quality this game exhibits for being a free download is impressive.  The art and animation are great, the story is funny and genuinely enjoyable despite being so simple, and the gameplay is smart and expertly tailored.  The only complaint I can leverage against The Button Affair is the completely artificial choice the player is presented with at the game's conclusion.  I was given the choice to either save the girl who had been my partner in the heist or walk away with the jewel I so desperately wanted to steal.  I played this final sequence twice to see the consequences of both actions, and the game very clearly presents one choice as the "correct" choice.  Enzo was a fine protagonist, but as a result of the game being so brief, he was a character who lacked depth.  As a result, I thought it was strange that the developers expected me to know whether Enzo truly desired the girl or the jewel.  On my first playthrough, I got the "bad" ending because my vision of Enzo differed from that of the developers.  I did not like being punished for making the choice I honestly thought Enzo would've made in that situation.

I enjoyed playing The Button Affair, but this experience does not change my opinion of auto-runners.  Had the game been much longer, I believe I would've either grown frustrated, similar to what I experienced when playing BIT.TRIP Runner, or grown bored.  As it exists however, The Button Affair was smartly scoped, fun to play, and did not suffer from any kind of tedium.

Cheers,
Danny

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