A free FPS game about kicking doors
Anger Foot is a free action video game that lets you kick down both doors and bad guys. Developed by Robbie Fraser, Luc Wolthers, and Jason Sutherland, this single-player game offers frenetic kicking and shooting gameplay, with 3D psychedelic graphics. Made for the “7dfps 2020” game jam, it’s a short game with only a few levels. However, it has decent replayability for anyone who wants perfect clears.
Foot-stomping fun
The gameplay of Anger Foot has you playing in the first-person perspective. You start off by kicking down a door into an apartment building—and defeating a goon behind it in the process. With your foot, you simply have to kick down the enemies coming after you until you reach the stairs, which ends the level. Level 2 then grants you a handgun that lets you deal with enemies far away from you.
You can easily grasp the controls with the quick in-game tutorial. The E key is for kicking while the left mouse button is for shooting. Your ammo is always limited so to get one last hit in, click your right mouse button to throw the gun at an enemy. You will only encounter two types of goons: those melee ones with spiked bats and those ranged fighters wielding guns.
The goal is to just reach the staircase as fast as you can. You don’t even need to kill all enemies in the level to pass—however, this will increase your overall score. The maps of each level have several rooms that are either dead ends or new rooms leading closer to the stairs. It can pretty hard to locate them since each level becomes maze-like. There are only 5 levels, though.
With your foot and your gun
Overall, Anger Foot is a fast-paced FPS game that’s great for anyone who loves this kind of rhythm in their gameplay. It’s pretty short and can be finished in just a few minutes since there’s no actual reward or achievement in clearing levels perfectly. However, it can be addicting enough for people who like beating their own high scores. Too bad it doesn’t have configurable graphics settings for better performance, though.