Brooks In Wild West -v1.00- By Piggy Nose Games 【HOT × BLUEPRINT】

The atmosphere is dusty, lonely, and strangely poetic. You play Brooks, a silent drifter with a mysterious past, and the game leans into that quiet Clint Eastwood vibe. The pixel art is rough in a charming, boot-stomped way, and the soundtrack—a sparse harmonium and twangy guitar—sounds like it’s being played by a ghost at an abandoned saloon. Dialogue options are few but impactful, forcing you to read faces and choose between mercy and a quick draw.

Brooks in the Wild West isn’t trying to reinvent the frontier—it’s trying to make you feel like a weathered gunslinger chewing tobacco and spitting regrets. And in that, v1.00 by Piggy Nose Games mostly succeeds, albeit with some tumbleweeds rolling through the code. Brooks in Wild West -v1.00- By Piggy Nose Games

Brooks in the Wild West v1.00 is a diamond in the rough—literally. It’s unpolished, stubborn, and occasionally broken, but if you love spaghetti westerns and don’t mind jank, you’ll find a short, moody gem here. Just save often, aim high, and never trust a man named “Tumbleweed Tim.” The atmosphere is dusty, lonely, and strangely poetic

Here’s an interesting, engaging review for Brooks in the Wild West - v1.00 by Piggy Nose Games: Dialogue options are few but impactful, forcing you

Yeehaw, but with a limp.

Fans of West of Loathing who want less humor and more melancholy. Avoid if: You need responsive controls or hate reloading saves.

The gunplay feels like it was coded by a drunk mule. Hit detection is unpredictable, and the “quick draw” mechanic is more about luck than reflex. There are also bugs—NPCs sometimes clip through hitching posts, and one time a wanted poster just… floated away into the sunset. Also, the save system (only at hotels) means you’ll replay the same boring cattle drive more times than you’d like.