Genre: 2D Platformer. Title: “Blaugust Hath 31 Days”. Outline: In this 2D platformer, you play as a young woman who is terrorized by 31 different monsters, one for each night of August. You must use your agility and wit to survive until morning and defeat the monsters once and for all.
The game is set in a small town that is being terrorized by 31 different monsters, one for each night of August. The player must use their agility and wit to survive until morning and defeat the monsters once and for all.
The player will have to platform their way around the town, avoiding the monsters and trying to find a way to defeat them. There will be different items and power-ups to help the player along the way. The game will be challenging but also fun, with a cute and quirky art style.
Every week, the monsters will share a common theme. For the first week of August, the monsters will share a theme of water creatures. The second week will be animals that come out at night. The third week will be plants and fungi. The fourth week will be ghosts and ghouls. The fifth and final week will be the toughest, with a variety of different monsters.
If the player can survive all 31 nights, they will be victorious!
The player will log achievements for every night they clear, and there will be a leaderboard to see how they compare to other players.
The game is easy for beginners but gets progressively harder as more monsters are introduced. There is also a “nightmare mode” for players who want an even greater challenge. In nightmare mode, the player can only use their fists to fight the monsters.
“Blaugust Hath 31 Days” will be a fun and challenging 2D platformer that will keep players hooked for the entire 31 days of August.
Once a player has cleared the game, the game unlocks previous years so the player can try to beat their high score. There’s no limit to how many years a player can try to beat.
“31 Days Hath August” is available now wherever fine video games are sold.
That’s Buffy in the top picture, isn’t it?
Probably?
I guess whenever I saw that picture, it was always that moon — clearly in front of the trees — that caught my eye.