Rhythm-Platformer Antro Wants to Beat the System with Beats

Nobody could accuse Antro of being square. The first game from the Barcelona-based Gatera Studio marries its love of dance beats with an aesthetic inspired by street culture and an apocalyptic story about corporate tyranny. It’s like a hip-hop cyberpunk game you can dance to. And dance you will if you play it, although probably not with your feet or body—your fingers will do the moving as they tap over your controller’s face buttons.
So, yes: Antro is cool, no matter how you slice it. I intended my first play session to last for maybe 15 minutes or so during a short break from a project I was working on, but got pulled in for an hour. Its intoxicating mix of music and constant motion will seduce you if you aren’t careful.
You control a faceless little roustabout named Niitch. They’re a tagger and a black market courier living in the underground city Antro, which is ruled by a company called La Cúpula. La Cúpula, if you couldn’t tell, sucks. What work they couldn’t automate has been forced upon the survivors of the catastrophe that drove humanity underground, and so almost everybody alive is trapped in crushing poverty, constant servitude, or, hey, how about both? And many of the few basic pleasures known in life have been banned by La Cúpula, including, most crucially, music. As Niitch your job is to sprint throughout Antro while avoiding detection from La Cúpula and its robot police force, helping the clandestine group of rebel noisemakers known as Los Discordantes in their rhythmic fight for freedom.
What that boils down to is a series of 2.5D platforming levels, where you hit buttons on the beat with the EDM-heavy soundtrack to jump, slide, and bash your way across any obstacles. When all that works Antro is as cool as it looks—a Parappa-style rhythmic puzzler set in a sidescrolling riff on Mirror’s Edge, with a pretty great soundtrack and a serious but not somber or stultifying sci-fi setup. And when it doesn’t work, well… I mean, c’mon. It still looks and sounds cool, at least.