sprunki phase 11 definitive fanmade
So I Tried That "Definitive" Fan Version of Sprunki Phase 11...
You know how sometimes you're just scrolling through game sites at like 2 AM, half-asleep, and you click on something called "definitive fanmade edition"? That was me last Tuesday. I was supposed to be working on a report, but instead I ended up down the Sprunki rabbit hole... again.
This "Phase 11 Definitive Fanmade" thing popped up. The name itself is a mouthful—who decides what makes a fan version "definitive" anyway? The original creator? Some random modder with strong opinions? But hey, I clicked.
The first thing I noticed: the colors are... intense. Like someone cranked up the saturation slider to 11 (fitting, I guess). The usual Sprunki characters are there, but some have weird little accessories—one's wearing what looks like a tiny traffic cone as a hat? Not sure what that adds to the sound, but it made me chuckle.
My friend Dave—the one who unironically listens to "elevator music mixes" while coding—would probably love this. He's all about those "definitive" versions of things. Me? I just wanted to make something that doesn't sound like a broken microwave.
Okay, So How Do You Actually Make Noise With This Thing?
Right, so if you're completely new to Sprunki (lucky you, the rabbit hole awaits), here's the stupid simple version: you drag little character icons into slots, they make sounds, and those sounds layer on top of each other. The goal is... well, there isn't really a goal. You just make noise until you're either satisfied or your brain feels sufficiently scrambled.
This particular version has some new sound effects. There's one that I swear sounds like a robot trying to gargle water, and another that's just... beeps. Lots of beeps. The "definitive" part seems to mean they added more high-pitched options. Great for annoying your roommate, I guess.
I tried to make something resembling music. Failed spectacularly. What I ended up with sounded more like a fax machine having an existential crisis. But you know what? It was weirdly satisfying. There's no pressure to make "good" music—just drag, drop, and see what chaos ensues.
That One Thing That Bugged Me (But In A Good Way?)
There's this green character with what looks like antennae. When you activate it, the sound is so sharp and tinny it practically drills into your skull. I hate it. I absolutely despise it. And yet, I kept using it in every combo because... well, it adds "texture," I guess? Or maybe I'm just a masochist.
My cat, Whiskers, actually left the room when I used that sound. True story. She gave me that judgmental look cats do, then trotted off to find somewhere quieter. So if you have pets, maybe skip that particular icon. Or use it to train them to leave you alone when you're gaming. Life hack?
Q: Is this easier than the original Phase 11?
A: Depends. If by "easier" you mean "has more annoying sounds," then yes. The mechanics are the same—drag and drop. But some of the new characters trigger sounds in slightly different patterns. One of them seems to have a delay? Or maybe my browser was lagging. Honestly couldn't tell.
Q: Can you actually make something listenable?
A: Define "listenable." If you mean "could this be background music for a quirky indie game about sentient vegetables?" then absolutely. For anything else... maybe lower your expectations. It's more about the process than the product.
Why Bother With A Fan Version?
Look, the official Sprunki games are fun and all, but sometimes you want something with a little more... personality. Or weirdness. This fanmade version has both in spades. It feels like someone took the original and sprinkled in their own inside jokes and sound preferences.
There's a character that looks suspiciously like it's wearing a pizza slice as a hat. I have no idea why. The sound it makes is a kind of squelchy pop. Does it resemble pizza in any way? Not even remotely. But it's there, and now it's part of my creative toolkit.
The weather's been rainy here all week, which put me in the mood to try and make something ambient. You know, rain-like sounds. I failed. Miserably. What I created sounded more like a broken sprinkler system than gentle rain. But for about 30 seconds, I was fully engrossed in trying to get the "drip" rhythm right. Then I got bored and started adding the annoying beep character again.
Oh, and there's apparently a hidden combo if you place three specific characters in a diagonal? Or maybe that's just forum speculation. I tried it. Got a weird glitch sound that might have been intentional or might have been my browser crying for help. Can't tell with these fan mods sometimes.
Final Verdict (If You Care)
If you've burned through all the official Sprunki phases and are looking for something with a different flavor, this is worth a click. It's not going to revolutionize your music production career (unless your career is making sound effects for abstract art installations), but it'll kill 15 minutes in an oddly satisfying way.
Just... maybe turn your volume down before you start. That green character is no joke.
3.5 out of 5 traffic cone hats. Would be 4, but my cat still hasn't forgiven me.