The game's art style is also clearly inspired by Cuphead, borrowing that title's 1930s cartoon aesthetic and its whimsical animations.Īnd just listen to the music in the trailer! The big band sound doesn't quite fit the fantasy atmosphere found in Enchanted Portals, but it does sound like something lifted right out of Cuphead.įor what it's worth, the developers at Xixo Games Studio aren't totally blind to the comparisons, with an artist on the game named Gemma telling Polygon, "Yes, of course Cuphead was a huge inspiration for Enchanted Portals." The question is, where do you draw the line between inspiration and straight-up copying the work of others? If you ask many of those commenting on the game's trailer on YouTube, Enchanted Portals is far more on the "ripoff" side of things. Enchanted Portals appears to be a part of the same bullet hell platforming genre as Studio MDHR's 2017 hit, requiring the same quick reflexes in order to survive its levels and bosses. From there, though, things become decidedly more Cuphead, as the game's trailer illustrates. Two children decide to experiment with magic and get a little more than they bargained for, as they're sucked through an "enchanted portal" into a strange new world filled with frog-kissing princesses and mecha-cows. Let us introduce you to Enchanted Portals, the newest game from the team at Xixo Games Studio.Įnchanted Portals appears to have an original enough story. And it looks enough like Studio MDHR's bullet hell platformer that folks on YouTube are starting to give the game the wrong kind of attention. It's an entirely separate project made by an entirely different development studio. It looks an awful lot like something that could be a follow-up to Cuphead made by the same team. Which is why the game we're about to show you may confuse you.
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