Hell Yeah! Wrath of the Dead Rabbit takes platform cliches and turns them into a gory mess

The star of Hell Yeah: Wrath of the Dead Rabbit is no cute bunny. He's an ultra-violent, psychopathic, undead rabbit corpse. His name is Ash and, while he's not lovable in the usual cute little wabbit-y kind of way, we suspect he's going to gain a lot of fans in the very near future.

Above: Meet Ash. He used to be a cute bunny. Now he's dead and hopping through Hell

Above: That's you in the middle, complete with large, serrated blade and rockets

The saw is worn on your back and allows you to scythe your way through minor enemies like the little winged chaps in the screenshot up there. Doing so can give you a little extra height on jumps, but mostly you'll just be jumping over platforms, collecting gems and cute little dead heads, searching for the larger monsters that lie throughout the levels.

The first is called 'Poy Poy' and looks exactly like a Puyo bean from Puyo Puyo Pop. This is the first of many, many Sega references. Poy Poy is being cocky because he's behind a wall and thinks you can't get to him. But you can. Just come back once you've unlocked the drill upgrade for your saw and you can slice through the wall and straight into soft, yielding Puyo flesh.

As you've likely guessed by now, this isn't some cutesy platformer. It's the anti-platformer. Make contact with a monster like poor old Poy Poy and a small energy bar appears beneath it. This depletes in mere seconds, which then triggers a micro game that's unique to each monster. Some require you to simply mash A, while others require timing challenges or even a quiz.

Above: Poy Poy ends up splattered all over the screen in blue and red chunks

Our favourite is the mini quiz, which asks: 'What is the average lifetime of a dead rabbit?' To which you can answer 'Two Years', 'Seven Years', 'Over 9,000' (internet meme ahoy!) or 'WTF?!' We got the answer right first time. It's 'WTF', of course.

Sadly, the demo doesn't go much further than this. It introduces the concept of 'Hell doors' which feed on 'weeping souls' which is obviously your reason for defeating a set number if these monsters before being allowed to progress.

Above: Little-known fact - even tiny monsters are packed full of gory bits

The game looks set to have a mountain of customisation options, all accessed through a shop that pops up at different points during the levels. We bought a donut ring skin for our buzzsaw, which is pretty cool. And, judging by the rest of the Sega references in here, we wouldn't be surprised if some spiky blue circle was available to buy. Just a hunch, that's all.

Above: There are more skins like 'Lovethong face', 'duck' and 'donut'

The game is smooth, pretty and very, VERY gory. But Arkedo has the skill to back up all the shocking imagery with compelling gameplay. We're looking forward to getting to know Ash a little bit better. Not that he needs any depth, mind. A killer undead bunny is a great idea for a videogame hero and that's a fact.

Above: The game is heading to XBLA and PSN this summer. Can you stomach it?

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Justin Towell

Justin was a GamesRadar staffer for 10 years but is now a freelancer, musician and videographer. He's big on retro, Sega and racing games (especially retro Sega racing games) and currently also writes for Play Magazine, Traxion.gg, PC Gamer and TopTenReviews, as well as running his own YouTube channel. Having learned to love all platforms equally after Sega left the hardware industry (sniff), his favourite games include Christmas NiGHTS into Dreams, Zelda BotW, Sea of Thieves, Sega Rally Championship and Treasure Island Dizzy.