![]() ![]() Discover a huge amount of secret worlds and challenges. Mutate your character in almost 30 different ways using radioactive waste around the world and get inventive in your combat strategies. Use a range of over 100 weapons, from the familiar machine-gun and shotgun to the slightly alternative screwdriver and quintuple-barreled rocketlaucher. It’s dangerous to go it alone - get together with a friend and battle your way to the Nuclear Throne with local co-op. ![]() Art by Super Crate Boxs Paul "Pietepiet" Veer, music by LUFTRAUSERS Jukio "KOZILEK" Kallio and SFX by Downwells Joonas Turner. Concept art by Nuclear Thrones Justin Chan.EtG has a lot more quantity, but NT has more endless replayability IMO, though it depends on what you're doing. NT is a lot more fast paced and has a looping mechanic where after the "final" boss is defeated in a certain way, you start back at the first level with all your stuff with the world having become more chaotic, adding new bosses and more weapons. Gungeon has a TON of unlocks and such, like items, new characters, stuff you get for killing pasts, etc. In Gungeon however, when you get good at the game, 95% of your runs are won consistantly. Where in NT, the game will always suprise you. ![]() There are barely ever any iframes in NT, and it is easy to die instantly, but 90% of these deaths are avoidable, and you learn to counter them more as you play. The 30 FPS in NT isn't a big deal in the slightest. ![]()
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