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Ruffy and the Riverside: Charming but Rough Around the Edges

Ruffy and the Riverside: Charming but Rough Around the Edges

G
GAIAJuly 25, 2025
5 min read
Reviews

I’m a sucker for oddball 3D platformers: give me a bright mascot, a weird gimmick, and a half-baked world, and I’ll stick around just to see how deep the rabbit hole goes. So when I first spotted Ruffy and the Riverside—a chunky, hand-drawn bear with a paintbrush grin—I was already sold. After about ten hours on my Series X, here’s where it shines, stumbles, and surprises.

  • Texture-swap “Troc” mechanic: clever spark, shallow well
  • World design: charming art meets placeholder geometry
  • Main quest: roughly six hours, plus extra for completionists
  • Platforming thrills vs. underwhelming combat
  • Technical hiccups dampen but don’t derail the fun

First Impressions

You control Ruffy, a wide-eyed bear who accidentally unleashes an evil force called Gnoll and must gather “sacred letters” to heal the world. The setup is familiar—a chosen one, quirky allies, and magical collectibles—but it wins you over with storybook presentation. Ruffy’s antics, from face-planting hay bales to tumbling through daisy patches, feel delightfully playful. The opening hub teems with hand-drawn NPCs—like a mushroom bard crooning a jaunty tune and a sassy owl dropping one-liners—that invite you to chat with every character.

The Troc System: Novelty vs. Execution

Riverside’s signature gimmick is the Troc mechanic, which lets you copy textures—lava, leaves, water—and paint them onto compatible surfaces. Turning a waterfall into climbable vines is an absolute joy, reminiscent of sandbox creativity in LittleBigPlanet. Yet the thrill fades once you discover only a handful of swappable elements and largely cosmetic results. With a deeper texture library and puzzles that reward unexpected combinations, the Troc could have been groundbreaking. Instead, it remains a neat trick that teases greater potential.

Platforming & Quests: Joyful Runs and Familiar Fetches

Channeling Banjo-Kazooie and Mario 64, Riverside serves up open hubs, collectathons, and mini-games. Launching off hay bales, racing through barrel runs, and mastering trick dives deliver genuine platforming joy. The physics feel snappy, and the camera is mostly cooperative. Side quests—gathering dream stones, butterflies, and gems—won’t surprise veteran completionists, but they’re paced well and often integrate the Troc system to unlock hidden paths. If you live for 100 percent, plan to spend a few extra hours hunting every nook.

Screenshot from Ruffy and the Riverside
Screenshot from Ruffy and the Riverside

Combat: An Afterthought

Combat feels tacked on, with Ruffy’s basic swipes lacking weight and enemy hitboxes floating inconsistently. Battles devolve into button-mashing without satisfying feedback—no satisfying clang or visual flourish to reward your strikes. A bit more punch, clearer foe variety, or even a simple dodge roll would make these skirmishes feel worth the detour. As is, combat interrupts the flow rather than enhancing it.

Visuals: Storybook Sketches vs. Placeholder Geometry

Riverside’s art style is a study in contrasts. Characters are lovingly hand-drawn, bursting with personality—Ruffy’s paintbrush grin is infectious. But step into the wider world, and you sometimes hit low-res textures or flat geometry that feels like stand-in art. While these jarring shifts never break the game, they undercut its storybook magic. A more consistent approach to texturing would help every corner of Riverside feel as intentional as its character work.

Screenshot from Ruffy and the Riverside
Screenshot from Ruffy and the Riverside

Audio & Soundtrack: Whimsical but Repetitive

The soundtrack leans into cheerful chiptune melodies that evoke dusty afternoons on vintage consoles. Each hub boasts its own theme—pastoral strumming for the fields, ominous tones for Gnoll’s domains—and sparse voice snippets add a dash of personality. But the loops can grow tiresome if you linger. A few extra layers or dynamic variations tied to story moments would keep the music from wearing thin during extended exploration.

Performance & Technical Quibbles

On Series X, Riverside holds a mostly stable frame rate, though framerate dips crop up when multiple effects coincide—imagine a Troc swap, an enemy spawn, and a particle-heavy scene at once. Clipping issues and odd camera angles can trap Ruffy in geometry for a beat. None of these bugs are game-breaking, but they highlight that Riverside feels like an ambitious indie still finding its footing. Future patches could smooth out these rough edges.

Screenshot from Ruffy and the Riverside
Screenshot from Ruffy and the Riverside

Replayability & Longevity

The main quest wraps up in about six hours, and completionists will spend a bit more chasing every collectible. Beyond that, there’s no New Game+, timed challenges, or leaderboards to lure you back. If you fall for Ruffy’s charm, you might revisit hubs for nostalgia’s sake, but most players will feel satisfied once all sacred letters are in hand.

Final Verdict: Flawed, Lovable, and Full of Soul

Ruffy and the Riverside delivers on its promise of a quirky indie platformer brimming with big ideas and unmistakable heart. The Troc system hints at brilliance but needs greater depth. The art style oscillates between enchanting sketches and undercooked assets. Combat sits on the bench while platforming takes center stage. Technical hiccups dampen the shine but never overshadow the core joy of discovery. If you grew up on N64 and PS1 classics, relish experimental mechanics, and can forgive a few rough edges, Ruffy’s weekend adventure is well worth the trip—especially at a discount. Just don’t expect AAA polish.

Rating: 7/10

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