When comparing Broken Age vs rRootage, the Slant community recommends Broken Age for most people. In the question“What are the best games on Linux?” Broken Age is ranked 46th while rRootage is ranked 121st. The most important reason people chose Broken Age is:
The graphics, music and voice acting are all top notch. Considering the amount of money this game made through its Kickstarter, it is no surprise the extent of the polish of the game.
Specs
Ranked in these QuestionsQuestion Ranking
Pros
Pro Polished art design
The graphics, music and voice acting are all top notch. Considering the amount of money this game made through its Kickstarter, it is no surprise the extent of the polish of the game.
Pro Great visual design
The dark background behind bright neon colors makes for a really interesting looking game.
Pro 4 different modes offer a variety of ways to play
While the 4 game modes aren't necessarily original ideas (they seem to be inspired by other games), when compiled under a single title with the great simplistic bright graphics they feel right at home. All of the modes share 1 thing in common: you do more damage to the boss the closer you are to it.
Normal mode acts like like vertical scrolling shooters: avoid the incoming fire, and get a few hits on the boss to damage it.
PSY mode rewards you for your sense of adventure - you build up power by having enemy fire close to your ship (within a white ring).
IKA mode has two colors of bullets - red and blue. You can swap between red and blue at any time, and you reflect bullets that share a color with you.
GW mode gives you a temporary shield on a cooldown that you can use to reflect bullets back at the boss.
Some of these modes are very interesting, and they reward you for being close to danger, and using enemy fire to your advantage.
Cons
Con Poor story in second act
The second act of the game has an increasingly incoherent story that explains very little of what is going on. Considering the first act ends with a cliffhanger and many questions to be asked, to see the second half explain almost none of it makes for a frustrating story.