Inside the game, the "story" is a playful, surreal homage to 1970s martial arts cinema.
: It proved that a "bedroom coder" could stand alongside giants on a global digital storefront.
: Unlike the hyper-realistic fighters of the time, the characters are literal puppets. They are made of plastic, moved by strings (or rather, physics-based mouse movements), and battle in dioramas that look like miniature film sets.
: It moved away from pre-set animations to "emergent" movements.
: In 2005, it became the first-ever third-party game to be distributed on Steam . Before this, Steam was exclusively for Valve’s own titles like Half-Life . This file, v2.3.zip , represents one of the early iterations that proved indie developers could find massive audiences without a traditional publisher.
: In the early 2000s, Mark Healey was a senior artist at Lionhead Studios (the makers of Fable ). He developed Rag Doll Kung Fu as a hobby in his spare time, often working on it late at night after his professional shift ended.
File: Rag.doll.kung.fu.v2.3.zip ... Review
Inside the game, the "story" is a playful, surreal homage to 1970s martial arts cinema.
: Unlike the hyper-realistic fighters of the time, the characters are literal puppets. They are made of plastic, moved by strings (or rather, physics-based mouse movements), and battle in dioramas that look like miniature film sets. Inside the game, the "story" is a playful,
: In 2005, it became the first-ever third-party game to be distributed on Steam . Before this, Steam was exclusively for Valve’s own titles like Half-Life . This file, v2.3.zip , represents one of the early iterations that proved indie developers could find massive audiences without a traditional publisher.
: In the early 2000s, Mark Healey was a senior artist at Lionhead Studios (the makers of Fable ). He developed Rag Doll Kung Fu as a hobby in his spare time, often working on it late at night after his professional shift ended.