Used Jumpman for Windows? Share your experience and help other users.


Editors’ Review

Download.com staff

Retro 2D platformers may be a dime a dozen these days, but that makes it even harder for one of the blocky jump, shoot, and run games to rise up and be noticed. Jumpman certainly achieves that goal with a Atari 2600 aesthetic, near infinite replayability, and the incorporation of an intriguing minor twist--the capability to rotate the board (on certain levels).

Your lives are unlimited, and bountiful in-game options let you customize your controls and color settings. Your goal consists of guiding your pixelated, E.T.-style hero--Jumpman-- from his entry point to the "Exit" sign in a seemingly endless number of levels. The levels consist mostly of platforms (visible and not), traps like lava walls, and a variety of beasties that kill and tools that assist Jumpman along the way. Your next level in the "path" is displayed behind your current adventure, creating a cool 3D effect.

It will take a little time to adjust to the gameplay, as Jumpman slides quite a bit, and rotating the board takes some practice, but seasoned platformers should quickly cruise through the first eight paths (about 90 levels or so). Then Jumpman starts to change color and the boards take on a whole new dimension. Experienced gamers should be able to finish the entire game in an hour or two.

Consistently surprising and entertaining, Jumpman saves your progress through the game and also provides a level editor for creating your own fun. It's certainly one of the best free platformer games of 2009.

Enlarged image for Jumpman
Jumpman 0/1


Explore More


Full Specifications

GENERAL
Release
Latest update
Version
0
OPERATING SYSTEMS
Platform
Windows
Operating System
  • Windows 98
  • Windows 2000
  • Windows Server
  • Windows NT
  • Windows 10
  • Windows ME
  • Windows Vista
  • Windows 95
  • Windows XP
  • Windows 2003
Additional Requirements
None
POPULARITY
Total Downloads
8,377
Downloads Last Week
0

Report Software

Program available in other languages


Last Updated


User Reviews

4/5

2 User Votes


Developer’s Description

Find your way to the exits by rotating the board in this retro platformer.

The concept of Jumpman is to take all the things that have become possible in games in the last 29 years-- physics, 45 degree angles, a z axis-- and bring the new technology into an early-80s-style platformer while at the same time changing the platformer's basic nature as little as possible. The hope is to try to make you believe that every 2600-era platformer would have looked like this if only you'd pulled the camera back about 4 feet. Like, every old game had something where you could walk off one side of the screen and suddenly appear on the other, right? What was actually happening there? Did space in the world where Pac-Man lives just happen to loop back on itself every ten feet? What would happen if you just took the camera and turned it a little bit to the right, would you see Pac-Man duplicated every 10 feet stretching off into the distance forever...?

The gameplay in Jumpman is, as the premise would suggest, pretty standard for a 2D platformer (although, about as hard as I could make it) but there are a few new mechanics added that are hopefully fun. Most of these have to do with exploring the idea of taking a single "level" from a platformer and trying to bring out all the possibilities latent in it, thinking, if you just jostle the components or look at it from a different angle it becomes something totally different. Like, if you think about it, the levels in these games were basically just abstract blocks-- in the days before those fancy-schmancy tiles there was nothing really to distinguish wall from ceiling. You could take a level map from one of those games, hold it sideways or upside down, and half the time you'd have an equally valid level map.

So, Jumpman outright lets you do that. There are controls to "turn the world" in the middle of play and rotate things such that the walls become floors and ceilings. In a lot of levels you have to do this to progress. There's some neat things you can do with this, like sorta you can walljump by just tilting the wall just enough to get footing on it.

Features include: old-school puzzle platforming with some twists; low-definition graphics; gamepad support; and a full-level editor.


Download.com
Your review for Jumpman