Defend The Ashes Overview
Defend The Ashes was one of those simple, direct games from the Flash era. You loaded it in a browser, and within seconds you were in the action. It didn't try to be anything more than a quick, reactive test of your coordination.
You control a pair of disembodied hands, represented by two cursor-controlled paddles at the bottom of the screen. Your job is to swat away cricket balls, or "ashes," being launched toward you, preventing them from reaching the trophy at the top. The moment-to-moment play is all about tracking multiple projectiles. You can bat them back upward for extra points, or simply deflect them off to the sides to clear the screen. The pace starts manageable but builds steadily, forcing you to split your attention between both hands. The game feels like a frantic, slightly absurd exercise in keeping a digital space tidy under increasing pressure.