Line/Dash

Line/Dash is an Arcade-oriented game that doubles as a procedural player-controlled multimedia sculpture.


Line/Dash is an Arcade-oriented game that doubles as a procedural player-controlled multimedia sculpture.
The basic gameplay is extremely simple, and only requires two buttons: the left click of your mouse will drop lines from the sky, while the right click will make those lines dash forward.
As the pace of the opposition gets faster and the line start splitting and crossing Line/Dash becomes a hypnotic and ever-changing visual experience.
Are you ready to put your reflexes through its paces in the middle of a deluge of arrows, sounds and neon colors?
Due to a very cool and custom audio compartment, this Rez-like game will falbbergast you without any doubt!

Features:
Immediate gameplay, just two buttons to drop lines from the sky and make them dash forward
Intriguing music and sfx perfectly fiting with the ever-increasing speed of the gameplay
Neon-like colors and vintage, arcade look, with a little modern twist

WARNING

Lots of contrasting bright colors, if you have problems with that stuff maybe don't play it

Controller Support

The game is fully playable with a controller after setting it up in the initial launcher. It will still need keybord/mouse support to get through the launcher

Price

Max: 1,99€

~

Min: 1,99€

Reviews

“[...] LineDash is profoundly addictive. Its lines and blocks collide with a pleasing thud. The whole screen shakes. What starts as a black-and-white color scheme gradually expands to neon shades on alternating black-or-white backgrounds. The game rewards reflexes with linear tableaus.”
Kill Screen

“Soon, it's not about saving your lives, but about keeping the blocks from ruining the picture you've created on your desktop. Dang squares, always trying to run my art!”
Indiegames

“LineDash is basically all there, but it is an entirely appropriate there to the purchase price and definitely a game that can offer involvement, fun, a sensible nontrivial challenge, and that bit of addiction that can make the fortune of such games.”
8/10 – IGN Italia