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Transistor (Japan)

Nintendo Switch
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Reviewed in
2018
83
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✪ Reviewed on September 1, 2024
83

Transistor blends tactical action and a whispered story in a cyberpunk city of painterly beauty. You program attacks in a frozen plan, then execute in real time: an elegant hybrid. The narrating sword's voice and Darren Korb's music are spellbinding.

Your verdict
Category
Action RPG 1 player 12+
Description
Red, a voiceless singer, roams a digital city armed with a talking sword that absorbs her enemies' functions. Published by Supergiant Games, released worldwide in 2018. Isometric action blending real time and planning, abilities to combine and a haunting soundtrack.

Transistor review

MAX
Art direction
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
"Legendary"
4/5
Story
"Captivating"
Cloudbank, an Art Deco city of cold neon, looks painted with a digital brush: elegant verticality, bluish light and stylised characters steeped in muted melancholy. This Supergiant signature, sumptuous and coherent, turns every screen into a painting.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Addictiveness
"Captivating"
Difficulty
"Easy"
Technical info
💾3 GB 📅01/11/2018
Published by Supergiant Games

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An underrated gem

Its reputation rests mostly on the soundtrack and mood, and that's exactly where many players stop. Yet the combat deserves a closer look: freezing time to compose your actions like sheet music, rewiring your functions and improvising between bursts is a strikingly elegant idea. Too often praised only for its looks, it truly rewards anyone who loves to tinker with and recombine their abilities.

Is Transistor still worth playing in 2026?

Transistor keeps the unmistakable seal of Supergiant Games: sumptuous art direction, a spellbinding soundtrack and melancholy writing. Its combat system, blending real-time action with frozen turn-based planning, stays original and invites you to assemble abilities in countless ways. The story, half-told by a talking sword, rewards careful decoding. Shorter and less legible than Bastion, it can disorient at first. But its singular atmosphere and devastating ending make it an experience that lingers.

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