New MMORPG is reminiscent of Terraria, celebrates release on Steam, is 76% positive

Kaetram, a new MMORPG launched on Steam on May 17, 2024, is reminiscent of Terraria with its 2D pixel look and underground world. Many of the first user reviews are positive.

What kind of game is this? Kaetram is a 2D pixel MMORPG from developer OmniaDev Inc., which was released in the early access version on Steam on May 17, 2024. You can also play the Free2Play title via Google Play or the App Store. For the Steam release, the developers changed the engine from HTML5 to Godot.

Kaetram takes you into a medieval world where quests, treasures and challenges await you. You can equip your hero with pieces of equipment and use your choice of clothing to determine whether you are more of a knight, magician or archer.

The Kaetram beta launch trailer:

Kaetram: Official trailer for the beta start of the Terraria MMORPG

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There are boss fights that you can tackle as a group or solo, but also PvP skirmishes between players. In addition to offensive and defensive skills, you can also master skills for alchemy, mining, fishing and more.

Where does the Terraria comparison come from? The action-packed adventure from Re-Logic is one of the best-rated games on Steam with 97 percent positive reviews. Kaetram still has a long way to go until then. However, the 2D pixel look and the explorable underground world already cause one or two déjà vu.

“I was immediately hooked”

How does the community rate the game? Kaetram hasn’t received too many reviews so far, but at least 76 percent are positive – that’s enough for a “mostly positive” rating.

  • Levy writes: “I’ve been playing this game for a few months and was immediately hooked. The biggest selling point of this game is the way the development team interacts with the community and releases updates. Players’ suggestions are taken very seriously, some are implemented within a few days, bugs are fixed almost immediately when reported.”
  • TSMSB | JustaMirage added: “I was drawn to the expansive world and just wanted to explore what the game had to offer. I stayed because of the community and support for the game. Everyone is always ready to help and the bug fixes come super quickly from the active developers. Lots of quests, hidden paths and caves, skills and bosses. Lots of potential, I recommend you get in early!”
  • However, some players complain about problems in the tutorial, which prevented them from accessing the actual game. This shows that the Early Access version is not a marketing campaign, but that the developers still have a lot of work to do. If that bothers you, just make Terraria 30 times harder – like this YouTuber.

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