ONRAID

ONRAID is a fast-paced, cartoon-styled 2D shooter built around competitive PvP. Players pick a class, load into compact battlegrounds, and rely on positioning, weapon choice, and quick reactions to outplay the other team. Between matches you can tinker with cosmetics and gear options, then jump back in to chase wins and improve your standing.

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Publisher: Pragmatix Ltd
Playerbase: Low
Type: 2D Shooter
Release Date: April 18, 2017
Pros: +A solid spread of modes for PvP variety. +Nine distinct classes with different roles. +Lots of skins and craftable gadgets to pursue.
Cons: -Input can feel slightly delayed at times. -Various bugs and technical hiccups have been reported.

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Overview

ONRAID Overview

ONRAID is a bright, arcade-leaning 2D PvP shooter where class selection matters as much as aim. You choose from nine classes, each designed around a specific approach to fights, so the game supports everything from aggressive brawling to more cautious, utility-driven play. Matches take place across four PvP modes (Sphere Control, Capture the Flag, Crystal Collection, and Point Control), which helps keep the loop from feeling one-note, even though the focus stays firmly on player-versus-player.

Loadouts are a major part of the identity here. ONRAID features more than 45 weapons, and the game encourages experimentation as you figure out what complements your class and your preferred engagement ranges. On top of that, you collect items through play and use them to craft gadgets and skins. These additions are not just cosmetic, they can come with trade-offs, so building your character is about making choices rather than simply stacking upgrades. With league play and leaderboards in the mix, ONRAID is at its best when you treat it like a competitive routine, queue up regularly, learn the maps, and tighten up team coordination.

ONRAID Key Features:

  • Nine Classes – select from nine classes, each offering different strengths and limitations.
  • Four Modes – compete in four PvP playlists: Crystal Collection, Capture the Flag, Sphere Control, or Point Control.
  • Crafting – earn materials from matches and craft skins and gadgets that can come with both upsides and drawbacks.
  • League Play – improve your play and push up the rankings to prove yourself against other players.
  • Quests – take on quests between matches for extra goals and rewards.

ONRAID Screenshots

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ONRAID Featured Video

ONRAID Трейлер

Full Review

ONRAID Review

ONRAID aims for the kind of quick, readable PvP that works well in 2D. The visual style is clean and colorful, and it generally does a good job communicating what is happening on screen, which matters a lot when multiple players, projectiles, and gadgets are colliding in tight spaces. The class roster is the main hook, because it gives matches a sense of structure, you are not just a generic shooter character with a different gun. Picking a class feels like committing to a role, and that can create satisfying team dynamics when players lean into complementary strengths.

The four modes also do real work. Objective-focused play (like Capture the Flag or zone-style control) gives ONRAID a reason to move and rotate rather than turning every match into a pure deathmatch chase. In practice, the best moments come from coordinated pushes, last-second defenses, and smart use of angles, especially when both teams understand the win condition and stop taking fights that do not help the objective.

Progression leans into collecting and crafting. The idea that gadgets and skins can involve trade-offs is a nice touch, because it frames customization as build-making instead of a simple grind for strictly better gear. It also adds a small layer of mind games, you can tailor a setup to your strengths, but you also have to live with the downsides, which can matter in competitive play.

That said, ONRAID is not without frustrations. Reports of control delay can undermine the tight feel that a skill-based shooter needs, and bugs or glitches can sour what would otherwise be a fair loss. For a PvP-focused title, technical consistency is part of the game design, and any instability is felt more sharply than it would be in a casual or PvE-heavy experience. The listed playerbase being low also means match availability and competition variety may depend heavily on when you play and whether you can bring friends.

Overall, ONRAID is easiest to recommend to players who enjoy smaller-scale PvP shooters, like experimenting with class-based tactics, and do not mind a game that can feel rough around the edges. When matches run smoothly, it delivers a solid loop of quick rounds, build tinkering, and leaderboard motivation.

System Requirements

ONRAID Requirements

Minimum Requirements:

Operating System: Windows XP SP2+, Vista, Windows 7 or Windows 8
CPU: 2 GHz Dual Core CPU
RAM: 4 GB RAM
Video Card: Video card with 512 mb and higher
Hard Disk: 800 MB

ONRAID is available for Mac OS X and SteamOS + Linux operating systems.

Music

ONRAID Music

Coming soon!

Additional Info

ONRAID Additional Information

Developer: Pragmatix Ltd
Publisher: Pragmatix Ltd

Release Date: April 18, 2017

Development History / Background:

ONRAID is created and published by Pragmatix Ltd, a Russian studio with offices in Krasnodar and St. Petersburg. Prior to ONRAID, Pragmatix worked on multiple mobile projects, including Wormix, Death Tour, and Orbix. ONRAID later made its way to Steam, where it launched on April 18, 2017.