Strike Suit Zero - Valve
Strike Suit Infinity is Now Available on Steam! Also owners of Strike Suit Zero get 50% off!*

Ok, cadet. This is it. All your training has brought you to this point - you are here for one reason only: to be the best.

Strike Suit Infinity is a frantic high score chaser where your skill is the only thing that matters. Whatever combat experience you have had so far is considered irrelevant. There is no end to the enemies you will face. There is no winning. There is only the fight for survival.

Take to the cockpit of one of three Strike Suits, engaging waves of enemies, building your multiplier and putting as many points on the board as possible. You’ll need to use your head, though. In between rounds, use credits to purchase upgrades and reinforcements, maximizing your potential in the next round. The longer you can stay alive, the bigger your score, and the higher up the leaderboard you’ll find yourself.

Engage intelligent enemy fighters and take on colossal capital ships, exploiting weak points in their super-structure to blow them apart piece by piece. Upgrade your Strike Suit and customize your weapon load-outs to tailor combat to your tastes. Take advantage of three very different Strike Suits to experience dogfighting action as you’ve never seen it before.

*Offer ends May 30th at 10AM Pacific Time

Strike Suit Zero - contact@rockpapershotgun.com (Jim Rossignol)

Enjoyed space-shooter Strike Suit Zero, did you? Well then, this news might excite or disappoint in equal measure: Born Ready Games send word that they’re bringing out another Strike Suit game, although this one’s a little simpler than you might have expected from a sequel, being a straightforward multiplier-driven score-chasing shoot ‘em up. Strike Suit Infinity “has been designed to provide endless challenge for competitive players through online leaderboards.” That’s the infinity part, I suppose. Not sure what that implies for the zero on the original game, though? Hmm.

Strike Suit Infinity is out on April 30th at a price of $7.

Strike Suit Zero - Valve
Strike Suit Zero - Raptor DLC, all new content for Strike Suit Zero is Now Available on Steam.

This rapid assault craft introduces a new way to play for fans of Strike Suit Zero. The fast-moving Raptor, with its devastating shotgun-style weapon will give the player new ways to blast through the missions.

Strike Suit Zero - contact@rockpapershotgun.com (Jim Rossignol)

The latest patch for space-combat blaster Strike Suit Zero looks like a cracker, with a much-demanded in-cockpit view (haha, cockpit is a funny word) which – like the game’s other views – should apparently work well with a three-monitor setup. So that’s fancy. In more practical news: the checkpoint system has been overhauled, the targeting systems has been reworked, and there are new difficulty levels. Strike Suit Zero Point Three>, more like.

Watch it all get explained by handsomely becapped community spokesman Jamin Smith, below. (more…)

Strike Suit Zero
strike suit zero


Review by Ben Griffin

In 2299, mankind has settled among the stars, multiplying to colonise planets that just a few decades ago it could only dream of reaching. It’s all thanks to The Signal, a mysterious transmission that gave Earth the recipe for interstellar travel. But with humanity spread throughout space, decentralised across a new frontier, fractures ripped apart the ranks and aggressive splinter groups emerged to contest Earth’s right to rule. This is where Strike Suit Zero finds its conflict, a deep-space-civil-war shooter looking to resurrect the long-dead-likes of Freelancer and X-Wing through zero-gravity combat and 360° battlefields.

Slow to start, Strike Suit Zero powers up like a rusty hyper drive. The first few missions lock away customisable upgrades and trade on wafer-thin dogfights with similarly able ships: you’re given the flimsiest fighter with the weakest plasma cannons and tasked with cleaning up space, hunting vagabonds by lining up reticules. This cosmic community service may well have you hankering after something with a bit more bite to it: IL-2 Sturmovik for instance. Despite the backdrop of striking blue nebulae, half-colonised worlds and fractured fringe planets, tasks amount to ‘kill X number of X’. It’s too little stretched across too much.



Mercifully, it gets better. This is Born Ready’s idea of holding back pudding until you finish your main course, and pudding in this case is a giant space robot – the Strike Suit to be precise – and when you’re designated test pilot by an enigmatic AI, it signals the start of the game proper. Destroy enemies to earn Flux, and you can transform into the Gundam-esque Strike Suit and unleash ferocious new powers.

The Strike Suit, deployed correctly, is the smart bomb of the game. Mecha mode lasts no more than 30 seconds, but each tick can be spent picking apart squadrons using the many tricks up your armoured sleeve. You can paint targets, fire off plasma volleys, and deal greater damage at greater frequencies. Your Strike Suit is a simple concept among simple concepts, nestling beside the shield and health mechanics (shields regenerate while health doesn’t), braking, boosting (use the former to turn sharply and the latter to evade) and EMPs, triggered to fry rockets on your tail.

No matter the scenario, whether assaulting a space station, escorting a convoy or protecting a vulnerable ship (there’s a lot of this), combat remains largely the same due to the arcade-basic leanings of the game. Strafing runs prove a primary tactic time and time again as you fire at a target while your shields take a pounding, then scatter before your health is affected. You’ll come away with none of Sturmovik’s heart-pounding war stories, facing frustration instead as uneven difficulty spikes and idiotic friendly AI lead to the end of the capital ship you’re tasked with protecting for the fifth time in a row.



Upgrades attempt to keep things fresh. Before each level, you’ll kit out interceptors, fighters, bombers and the Strike Suit with swarm missiles, heat-seekers, plasma bursts, shield-disruptors and unguided rockets, and while it doesn’t have the depth of other giant robo-games like Hawken or the consoles’ Armored Core, it adds a personal touch. There’s a nagging feeling of inconsequentiality though, with everything a variation on a theme: this blue laser or that one?

SSZ does an admirable job recreating the intuitive and instantly accessible flight combat of the games it holds in high regard, but comparisons with the likes of X-Wing and Freelancer aren’t valid when mission design is so simple and your wingmates are so dumb.

Expect to pay: $19 / £12
Release: Out now
Developer: Born Ready Games
Publisher: In-house
Link: www.strikesuitzero.com

Strike Suit Zero - contact@rockpapershotgun.com (Nathan Grayson)

What would you do if some malevolent genie offered you the choice between either a) a rip-roaring, physics-defying spaceship, or b) a star-destroying giant robot? I would cry. Born Ready, though, presumably encountered that exact situation and decided to create an alternate reality in which they got both. In Strike Suit Zero, you play as a ship that transforms into a giant robot. Take that, evil genie. But is it the dream come true it sounds like it should be? And can it carry an entire arcade space shooter on its cannon-coated shoulders? Here’s wot I think.>

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