Hogar > Noticias > Pixel Starships presenta Cyanide & Happiness Colaboración: nuevos personajes, humor loco

Pixel Starships presenta Cyanide & Happiness Colaboración: nuevos personajes, humor loco

By AudreyMay 02,2025

Savysoda ha presentado una nueva colaboración emocionante dentro de Pixel Starships, integrando el extravagante mundo del cianuro y la felicidad webcomic en la aventura espacial de 8 bits. Esta asociación lleva el amado y poco convencional humor de cianuro y felicidad directamente a su viaje intergaláctico, completo con nuevos artículos coleccionables y modos de juego innovadores que atienden a los fanáticos de los adorablemente absurdos.

Pixel Starships y Cyanide & Happiness Collaboration

Apodado "C&H Goes to Space", este evento presenta ocho de los caracteres icónicos de figura de palo de Explosm en el MMORPG. Personajes como el Lunk Cluishess con su HP excepcionalmente alto, Ted Bear con sus habilidades ardientes y Shark Rad empuñando una explosión mortal para agitar el caos en el cosmos. Con estos personajes al timón, los jugadores pueden anticipar una experiencia emocionante e impredecible.

Nuevos personajes en Pixel Starships

El evento por tiempo limitado también presenta un pase de batalla exclusivo y nuevas narraciones para explorar a través de misiones temáticas. Un nuevo comerciante de especias, Harry el guapo carnicero, estará disponible para suministrar a los jugadores con armas poderosas, tanto literal como figurativamente. Para aquellos que buscan más recompensas temáticas, el elemento de las patas PEG del Capitán está disponible, aunque su función exacta sigue siendo un misterio para descubrir en el juego.

Harry, el guapo carnicero en Pixel Starships

Descrito como "más clavijas que extremidades", decidir si confiar en Harry para pilotar su barco agrega una capa intrigante a la aventura.

Si está ansioso por sumergirse en esta diversión de ciencia ficción, ¡diríjase al blog oficial de Pixel Starships para obtener más detalles y unirse al Cosmic Chaos!

Artículo anterior:El juego de terror 'Coma 2' presenta una dimensión espeluznante Artículo siguiente:Stephen King, the master of horror and storytelling, is famously known for his belief that you can't truly spoil a good story. He often argues that a great narrative—especially one with strong characters, atmosphere, and emotional depth—can withstand knowing the ending. In fact, he's famously said, "The only real horror is the human heart, and the only thing that can truly spoil a story is a bad ending." But even within that philosophy, he does acknowledge one notable exception. That exception? The "spoiler" that ruins the emotional impact of a twist, particularly one that hinges on irony, revelation, or a character’s tragic realization. King has stated that while most plot twists are "spoilable" in the traditional sense, some spoilers—especially those that reveal a character’s fate in a way that robs the reader of emotional journey—can indeed destroy the power of the story. For instance, in It, he once noted that knowing early on that Pennywise the Dancing Clown is not just a monster but a manifestation of childhood fears and trauma enhances the story. But if you were to learn, say, that a beloved character dies in a way that contradicts everything the reader has come to believe about them—without the buildup, the dread, the mounting tension—then the emotional punch is lost. So, while King generally champions the idea that great stories endure spoilers, he does draw a line: A story can be "spoiled" not by revealing plot points, but by stealing the emotional truth or psychological payoff that makes it powerful. As he puts it in On Writing: "The most powerful moments in storytelling aren't the ones you see coming—they’re the ones that hit you like a freight train because you didn’t see them coming... but when you do see them, and they still hurt? That’s magic." So, to clarify: King doesn’t think you can spoil a good story by revealing plot twists. But he does believe you can ruin a story by revealing the emotional truth too early—especially when that truth is the point of the story. Thus, the "exception" isn't a plot twist—it's the emotional core. And that’s the one spoiler that truly matters.