Age Of Barbarian Extended | Cut The Spider God-plaza
To complete The Spider God DLC in Age of Barbarian Extended Cut
Age of Barbarian Extended Cut: The Spider God is a major expansion (DLC) for the 2D action-adventure hack-and-slash game Age of Barbarian Extended Cut, developed and published by Crian Soft. Released on November 16, 2018, this content pack continues the game's heavy inspiration from 80s "Sword & Sorcery" aesthetics, characterized by pulp-style fantasy, extreme gore, and digitized sprite graphics. Expansion Overview Age of Barbarian Extended Cut The Spider God-PLAZA
In Age of Barbarian Extended Cut: The Spider God, players take on the role of a brave warrior, tasked with defeating the dark forces of the Spider God, a powerful deity who threatens to destroy the land. The game features a vast open world to explore, a variety of magical spells and abilities to master, and a rich storyline with multiple endings. To complete The Spider God DLC in Age
It is violent, clunky, ugly-beautiful, and unapologetically brutal. The Spider God expansion adds a sense of scale missing from the original campaign. If you want to feel like a 1980s Schwarzenegger cartoon trapped inside a 2023 indie game engine—and you don't want to pay for the overpriced Steam DLC—Age of Barbarian Extended Cut The Spider God-PLAZA is the version to conquer. Visuals: The character models are blocky, textures are
Key Features
Combat: Features "Brutal Blade Fights" where players must master timing for strikes, parries, and dodges. Attacks feel weighty and deliberate, similar to older action platformers.
- Visuals: The character models are blocky, textures are muddy up close, and the color palette is oversaturated (blood is neon red, grass is toxic green). However, the art direction is consistent. The Spider God boss is genuinely unsettling, with a dozen rigid legs and a human-like face on an arachnid body.
- Audio: The voice acting is hilariously bad, delivered in gruff, unintelligible grunts. The sound design excels in the gore department – bones crunching and steel slicing flesh sound appropriately sickening. The metal soundtrack features obscure underground bands, which adds to the cult appeal.