It was claimed over a month ago that an Echochrome Demo was arriving next week to the Playstation Network Store though unfortunately never made it. Well today, Echochromes Associate Producer Kumi Yuasa has announced on the Official Playstation Blog that demos of the game will be available for download from tomorrow for both the Playstation 3 version as well as the Playstation Portable version.
Kumi Yuasa though also claims that with both version players will have the ability to create there own puzzles and send or upload them to friends around the world through the Playstation Network. In addition to the files that have been uploaded to the Playstation Network he claimed that the games developers will consider the levels submitted and possibly release as a future down-loadable content piece.
echochromes Associate Producer Kumi Yuasa revealed on the Official Playstation Blog that demos of the game will be available for download starting tomorrow on the PS Network for both PS3 and PSP. The demos will take you through a brief tutorial and give you the basic idea of how to progress through the puzzles.
Yuasa also said that each of the PS3 and PSP final versions of echochrome (preview + video) will feature 56 exclusive levels and that players will be able to create their own puzzles from scratch and share them with their friends or even the world through the Playstation Network.
Gamers will also be able to upload their own creations to the developers through the games interface. Once uploaded, your creation will be considered by the developers for a future downloadable content release.
echochrome is expected to be available this May exclusively for the Playstation 3 and PSP.
- echochrome PS3, PSP Demos Out Tomorrow (shacknews.com)
- Sony readies Echochrome for download on PS3, PSP (gamepro.com)
- echochrome Demoed and Dated (ps3.ign.com)






Comments
I played it through (the demo) once, but that was about it >_>
It is all about perception, not actual reality and physics. It is sort of like a 3D world with 2D dimensions (as far as the laws of physics go)....
Try the demo, it isn't very big.
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