![Crimsonland](https://kumkoniak.com/110.jpg)
Gameplay-wise, Crimsonland is functional and will feel instantly familiar to any veterans of the genre.
![Crimsonland Crimsonland](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/dRqoiMM5euk/maxresdefault.jpg)
Beyond that, there really isn’t any story to speak of. Revisiting 10tons’ first entry in the gaming world, Crimsonland puts you in the boots of a Trooper faced with gunning down waves upon waves of baddies that have no relation to each other, including mutant spiders, aliens, lizards and zombies (of course). Eschewing the story-based style of games like Dead Nation and Alien Breed for a bigger focus on arena type matches, Crimsonland offers functional gameplay with tons of replayability at a low cost. Taking the functional parts of every twin-stick shooter you’ve ever played and injecting just a hint of RPG elements in for good measure, Crimsonland doesn’t quite transcend the genre, but it certainly makes an extremely fun case for revisiting it. On that note, let’s talk about Crimsonland, a somewhat generic top-down twin-stick shooter that manages to squeeze a ton of fun out of its premise.
![Crimsonland Crimsonland](https://igg-games.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/Crimsonland-Free-Download.jpg)
While variations do exist (shoot through space, shoot through zombies, etc.), it’s hardly a revolutionary genre, albeit an extremely fun one. We all know how twin-stick shooters work by now, right? You’ve got your controller with two analog sticks (or a mouse and keyboard for you traditionalists out there), an arsenal of guns, an army of baddies and a score tracker.
![Crimsonland](https://kumkoniak.com/110.jpg)