🩸 DreadLine: Net Quota – Game Review by Aydan von Wolf 🎣
- Aydan Storm von Wolf
- Jul 16
- 2 min read
Updated: Jul 17

Right out the gate, the visual style of DreadLine: Net Quota sunk its claws into me. The graphics are bold, gritty, and drenched in that comic book-meets-manga aesthetic that makes you feel like you’ve stepped straight into a twisted illustrated story. You’re not just playing a game—you’re flipping through the chaotic pages of one.
The tutorial? Clean, smooth, no-nonsense. The concept? Easy to grasp. You’re a bunch of oddballs stuck fishing for freaky catches in a world that feels half Lovecraft, half industrial doom-factory. There’s character customization too—although if I’m being real, it feels a little shallow. You can start the flavor, but not season it. Same for the boat—it’s got potential, but I want to goth out my vessel, throw on some skull decals or glowing runes or something. Give us more to obsess over!
Now let me be blunt: this is not a game I’d recommend with randoms. This game screams “squad-up-or-die.” It’s made for chaos with friends—no less than four if you want real synergy. We laughed, panicked, and flailed our way toward filling the quota, all while the time limit loomed over us like a vengeful tax collector. We definitely owed somebody some fish-money...
That said—there are some barnacles clinging to the hull. The "save" system? Kinda busted. It’s not intuitive, and when you lose connection (which we did), there's no rejoin option. No reconnect, no grace period. It kicked us right back to square one, money gone, progress lost, spirits briefly shattered. We’d played two hours and barely scratched the deeper story because of it, which felt like a slap with a wet fish.
Still, despite the setbacks, I’d 100% recommend DreadLine: Net Quota to any crew looking for a fun, frantic co-op experience. The vibes are there. The teamwork is essential. The potential? Glorious. Just be prepared for a few waves along the way.
🦴 Verdict: Gothic-approved group chaos with killer style. Just bring friends... and maybe a backup net.
— Aydan von Wolf

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