Metascore
74

Mixed or average reviews - based on 7 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 3 out of 7
  2. Negative: 0 out of 7
  1. Jul 30, 2019
    90
    198X is an incredible nostalgia trip for those who grew up playing arcade games and gives younger players the opportunity to experience those games in all their 80s glory.
  2. Playstation Official Magazine UK
    Aug 27, 2019
    80
    It also has some excellent riffs on Streets Of Rage, Shinobi III, and R-Type. The pixel art and lo-fi soundtrack are gorgeous throughout, both in-game and out. This bills itself as “part 1” of an episodic experience, but it’s a short, satisfying, and cheap experience on its own. [Issue#166, p.84]
  3. 80
    A fascinating if overly lean meditation on the video game scene of old, 198X is a compressed, weaponised dose of nostalgia that deserves to be experienced by anyone whom professes a love for this greatest of hobbies.
User Score
5.8

Mixed or average reviews- based on 16 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 8 out of 16
  2. Negative: 6 out of 16
  1. Jul 31, 2020
    8
    This review contains spoilers, click full review link to view. 198X A pixel are game that has you going through the life of a seriously emo kid in the 1980’s which would likely be around the time arcades fell apart with the Atari crash, or got really good after Nintendo released the NES and things picked up… except that was in the early 90’s when things like Street Fighter 2 and Final Fight were released and given that the entire thing plays through like a 16bit game, which didn’t also kick in until the 90’s they were a bit off on the naming.

    That aside, the game was short, about an hour and ten minutes, but you play through five “games” in this game, one is a Final Fight beat ‘em up, a racing game ala Out Run, a space bullet hell shooter like Gradius, a Ninja Gaiden clone, and a pre-doom RPG which you control with the stick, but had the nice feature of the “player” typing int “Walk forward” “Turn Right” in the old zork way of thing.

    The games themselves weren’t difficult really, and just long enough to be fun before they got annoying since they don’t have the real depth the full games they copy would. The pixel art though? Amazing. The big sprawling screens when Emo Elliot were amazingly well done and crafted and really worth the price of admission (5$ on sale at Steam at the moment) alone.

    The story… I mean. It’s a thing. The kid has so many sharp edges to his personality he could shave his face by rubbing his hands on it. Something, something, dad died or left, something something, mom struggles… something something, kid is a dick to the only parent he has left and both are in a depression, something something… he finds an arcade with the “Coolest bunch of losers around” Honestly, the narrative was so laced with CW emo writing, it didn’t matter in comparison to the rest of the game.
    Full Review »
  2. Feb 6, 2020
    8
    This review contains spoilers, click full review link to view. What attracted me the most to support this game is the Art. The 16-bit art style is my favorite. I love arcade games and 198x has a plot revolving around arcades which is attractive to me. Then i heard Yuzo Koshiro will make music for the game i got super excited , but i was very disappointed with the ninja levels that have Koshiro’s music in them, the music is great but the gameplay on those levels is very disappointing. It is like a mobile run game. It didn’t give arcade experience like expected. The kid in the game is talking about his arcade experience but he is playing a mobile game. I wish part 2 of the game will give a true arcade adventure experience. Full Review »
  3. Aug 10, 2023
    3
    Una amalgama de minijuegos retro de sólida jugabilidad y atractiva estética ochentera, el problema es que estos minijuegos son demasiadoUna amalgama de minijuegos retro de sólida jugabilidad y atractiva estética ochentera, el problema es que estos minijuegos son demasiado simples y quedan lastrados por una dificultad muy mal medida. Full Review »