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Rebeloid is a straightforward brick-breaker game in the arcade genre. It’s a single-player title developed by Kodobur Game & Software Technologies and released on PlayStation 5 on April 15, 2026. The game follows the classic formula of guiding a paddle to bounce a ball and shatter blocks, with simple mechanics and minimal story. It’s a non-VR offering, focusing on quick sessions and nostalgic appeal. The game leans into retro gameplay with modern visuals, though it lacks innovation beyond core mechanics. Ideal for players seeking short, repetitive challenges.
In Rebeloid, you control a paddle to bounce a ball and break layers of bricks. Each level introduces randomized power-ups that alter the paddle size, ball speed, or add extra balls. The ball can split into multiple projectiles, but hitting the floor ends the round. Levels are timed, and progress depends on clearing all bricks within the limit. The controls are responsive, with intuitive left-right paddle movement. Sessions last 5, 10 minutes, and the game offers 50+ levels with increasing difficulty. Later stages add moving bricks and shifting obstacles, but the formula stays consistent. The focus is pure action with little strategic depth.
Rebeloid holds a 7.8/10 user rating on PlayPile, with 63% of players completing it. Average playtime is 4 hours, and 32% of community moods report frustration, while 29% feel nostalgic. Critics gave it a 68/100, calling it “a forgettable riff on a tired genre.” Players highlight the “addictive yet soul-crushing repetition” and praise the “crisp visuals for a throwback title.” However, 41% of reviews mention it “runs out of steam after the first hour.” Achievements unlock for clearing levels, with a total of 28, averaging 5 hours to complete. The game’s polarizing mix of simplicity and grind splits opinions.
Rebeloid is worth a few hours for arcade purists but lacks longevity. At $29.99, it’s a small investment for nostalgic players who enjoy quick bursts of action. The 4-hour average playtime and 63% completion rate suggest it’s easy to start but hard to finish. The 28 achievements add minor incentive, but the core loop grows repetitive. Skip this if you prefer depth or variety. For die-hard brick-breaker fans, it’s a decent, if unoriginal, option. The PS5 port is solid, but don’t expect anything impressive.
Game Modes
Single player
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