Freedroid RPG

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Freedroid RPG is an Open Source Role-Playing Game in the style of Fallout or Diablo. In it, Tux the Penguin fights off an army of crazed robots with weapons such as bare flippers, wrenches, swords, lightsabers and "The Exterminator". The game is based on Paradroid, borrowing from it both the robots and the ability to take control of one's foes. The game is currently in beta, but the current release is remarkably filled out (and stable).

Tropes used in Freedroid RPG include:


  • A.I. Is a Crapshoot: The entire point. Filled with Killer Robots.
  • Awesome but Impractical:
    • The Super Exterminator!!! (with exclamation points). One shot is able to take down most of the robots, however requires 5 seconds to reload, requires to be repaired after about ten shots and may damage you if you're standing too close.
    • Chainsaw is cool, but best used to trade away. Thanks to being two-handed, taking only slightly less space in inventory than Antique Greatsword and lowest Durability ever, combined with very high rate of attacks (which gives average DPS slightly above Antique Greatsword, but makes it wear very quickly).
  • BFG: Aforementoned The Super Exterminator!!! and Barret M82.
  • Bilingual Bonus: Engel Fleischer (Angel Butcher) and his brother Geist (Ghost)
  • Black and Grey Morality: The very first quest of the game requires you to help the leader of the Red Guard commit mass murder.
    • Unless you opt to pretend you're a complete ditz. This approach works when dealing with Red Guard in other cases too.
    • As of version .15, you have to side with the Red Guard in order to reach the endgame.
    • There are plans to avert it and let the player character join the resistance.
  • Breakable Weapons: Weapons got Durability stat.
  • Cast from Hit Points: The "spellcasting" system. You cast spells by running "programs", which heats up Tux's brain. If you get hot enough, you begin to take damage. Continue to cast spells, and Tux will go into sleep mode for a while, with no means of protection.
  • Crapsack World: The Red Guard taxes and oppresses the population into oblivion, the only food is carcinogenic MREs (despite the presence of a trained chef, whose cooking apparatus was used as fuel by the Guard), and of course, there are the hordes of killer robots.
  • Critical Existence Failure: Quite dramatically.
  • Design-It-Yourself Equipment
  • Escort Mission: Tania who you have to escort from her underground fortress to the town, past many extremely deadly robots.
  • Fan Remake: Of Paradroid and, to some extent, Fallout.
  • Game Within a Game: Several. There is the Hacking mini-game, several betting games, a pseudo-Nethack game, and even a version of Progress Quest (the shareware version).
  • Give Me Your Inventory Item: Occasionally.
  • Glass Cannon: 420 "Coward"
  • Gratuitous German: Engel sometimes uses some German words, and Geist uses only German.
  • Grey Goo: Doc mentions this when explaining why the best health potion uses short-lived nanobots instead of long-living ones. They evolved into some kind of grey goo cancer, that devoured everything and made several planets uninhabitable.
  • Hive Queen: The singularity is basically this, in that it has many component parts, but you only can talk to one of them. Somewhat inverted as it is a robot.
  • Hero-Tracking Failure: 139's plasma bullets, which will hit you only if you stand still or run straight towards it. May also happen with you while wielding a plasma weapon.
  • Hollywood Hacking: It's Paradroid.
  • Human Aliens: Averted. The "Linarians" are penguins, one of which is the main character.
  • Karl Marx Hates Your Guts: Venders pay you 30% of what the item is worth, but charge at least 100%...
  • Kill It with Fire: "Plasma Discharge", as well as purchasable grenades.
  • Kill the Poor: The Red Guard want to abandon the poor, eldery and weak civilains still in cyrosleep to certain death in order to increase power efficiency in the town.
  • Last of His Kind: It's implied that the player character is the only alive Linarian.
  • Made of Explodium: The player character.
  • Marathon Level: Hell Factory
  • Mega Corp: MegaSys, which has logos on nearly everything.
  • Money Spider: Droids drop "circuits" which conveniently happen to be the currency used, as well as other items.
  • No Hero Discount: Well, you do seem to be their only customer. Even if you save Stone's shop you are charged full price.
  • Obstructive Bureaucrat: The Red Guard are a Disturbingly extreme example of this.
  • Only Six Faces: Most of the characters look exactly the same. Averted by Ewald and Stone, justified by Red Guards and Dixon, because of constantly wearing uniform.
  • Overheating: Casting too much spells may end with this.
  • Plot Coupon: Used in many places, such as the dilithium crystals which must be retrieved from an abandoned mine.
  • Ridiculously-Human Robots: Averted; the only android you meet fools Tux for a while, but quickly blows up. All other robots, while looking vaguely humanoid, are quite obviously not in any way human.
  • Robo Speak: All droids deliver a Pre-Ass-Kicking One-Liner before attacking, not from sound files but from an actual voice synth built into the game. Notable are "First Law Disabled", "Slice, Slice, Slice", and "Redmond, we have a problem".
  • Shout-Out: Lots of them.
    • The main character is Tux, the Linux mascot.
    • The game contains a few references to Nethack. It even includes a quasi-Nethack game.
    • Richard, *nix admin living in town mentions Pandora, an open-source handheld, currently in development.
    • Some citizens are represented by guys in red hats, a Shout-Out to Red Hat Linux.
  • Slept Through the Apocalypse
  • Sorting Algorithm of Evil: Somewhat literally; as in Paradroid, stronger robots have higher ID numbers. That is, if you see a 123 it's "free EXP time!", a 139 (which is the only low-level robot with a ranged weapon) it's "Oh no, kill it!", a 249 (which wields a machine gun) is "OMG KILL IT!!", and a 302 is "*splat*" (unless you hack it). You find higher-level droids as you venture farther from town.
    • 296 is a notable exception - despite being a 2xx type, it's harder to beat than some 4xx robots because of loads of HP AND powerful melee attacks.
    • 139 and 247 (once you can hack it too) are something you may like to see: they are easy to capture without being hit (139 has long pauses between slow shots, and 247 is melee-only), common enough that they are easy to collect in swarms and replace, make decent cannon fodder for their level, and aren't slow.
  • Thriving Ghost Town: Very odd and extreme. The only town currently in the game has a population of about ten, but has enough space to hold maybe fifty. An NPC claims it contains a population around 250, and that there isn't any food. Huh.
  • Undefeatable Little Village: Lampshaded.
  • We Buy Anything: You can sell everything. Even guns, which are forbidden.
  • X Meets Y: Paradroid meets Fallout.