

Face the ultimate challenge in Beneath, a massive roguelike campaign filled with deadly creatures, secrets, and bosses.Dive into action-packed scenarios including a Biker Bar, Disco, Prison, Pirate Cove and Western Saloon each filled with unique enemies and weapons.Demolish completely destructible voxel-based enemies.Create your own massive brawls, horrific adventures, ingenious puzzle levels and more with the intuitive editor. Our amazing community has used the in-game Level Editor and Custom Texture and Music options to add thousands of amazing new levels to the game on the Steam workshop. In the epic rogue-lite Beneath you'll have to delve deep underground battling terrifying monsters and unlocking powerful upgrades in a battle against ancient evils. In the Scenario levels you'll need to use your wits, speed and anything you can get your hands on in epic bar fights, disco brawls, old west saloon rumbles and more. The voxel-based enemies can be punched, bashed, kicked, stabbed and sliced completely dynamically using almost anything that isn't nailed down.

The earliest written record comes from Kentucky USA in 1881.Paint the Town Red is a chaotic first person melee combat game set in different locations and time periods and featuring a massive Rogue-Lite adventure.

Whether this is the origins of the phrase 'painting the town red' is contested. It took nearly 18 months to bring the case against the Marquess and three other men before the court, they were each fined £100, for their night of painting the town red. One of the friends of the Marquess was arrested and taken to the local gaol, and the Marquess succeeded in breaking him out. When the town watchman tried to stop them, he was covered in red paint too! Once in the Market Place they covered anything they could reach in red paint, even climbing on each other's' shoulders to attack the white swan high up on the front of the White Swan Inn. The revellers then took pots of red paint and proceeded to liberally splash doors and windows along Sherrard Street, they also stole door knockers, smashed flower pots, threw the Red Lion Inn sign into the canal, and tried to turn over a caravan in which people were sleeping. The toll keeper, awoken by the noise, tried to shoot them but in his dishevelled state he forgot to load any powder into his gun. The revellers then rode around the town and entered by a different route ending up at Lord Rokesby's Club in Burton End.Īt 3 am, they returned to the toll house and boarded the windows and door shut. On 6 th April 1837 the Marquess of Waterford and his aristocratic friends, including several magistrates, a serving MP and a baronet, had spent the day at Croxton Park races, on their way back into Melton they were stopped at the toll house and refused entry as they were too drunk.
