Compara los precios de Superhero Simulator en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por mightyraccoon! Studios. Publicado por mightyraccoon! Studios. Lanzado el 15/9/2025. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Action, Adventure, Casual, Indie, RPG, Simulation, Early Access.

Part Spider-Man wish fulfillment, part rent-is-due anxiety sim: Goldpine City's double-life loop is a genuinely fresh idea that Early Access bugs and shallow combat are still working hard to undermine.

I track resource loops and progression curves for a living, so when I see a game grafting life-sim survival mechanics onto an open-world action sandbox, my first instinct is to stress-test the feedback systems. After time with Superhero Simulator, the short answer is: the loop is real, and it is interesting, but the numbers underneath it are still sloppy. You play a superpowered resident of Goldpine City who has to juggle cape-on crime-fighting with a very unglamorous civilian income. Driving a taxi, flipping burgers, and working a cash register are your actual side jobs, with a in-game currency called Gollars keeping rent paid and gear upgraded. Neglect the day job and your hero progression stalls. Ignore the villain spawns too long and city reputation takes a hit. That tension between two resource pools is legitimately clever design for an indie debut. On the action side, you get flight, super speed, and super strength as your core mobility toolkit, and the flight mechanics are the clear standout. Soaring over Goldpine feels smooth and genuinely satisfying in a way that few small-studio open-world games manage. The comic-book visual style, with its cel-shaded buildings and vibrant districts, makes the traversal a pleasure. Boss encounters add some structure to the mission roster, and the emergent street events, rescuing civilians, stopping robberies, and handling a medical emergency mid-patrol, give the city a pulse. Steam Workshop support is already live, which is a smart move this early and signals the developer wants a modding community around the project. Here is where the strategy-brain in me starts circling problems on the spreadsheet. Combat is the weakest column in the whole design. The hit feedback is loose, enemy variety is thin right now, and what should be a satisfying power fantasy too often collapses into button-mashing against unresponsive targets. Mission structure is repetitive, with side jobs and crime events recycling quickly enough that the novelty window closes faster than the developers probably intended. The UI is clunky enough to frustrate controller users in particular, and the build still ships with collision bugs that can drop your character through the map geometry. The developer, whose background is in superhero short films and animation on YouTube, is patching weekly and the community update cadence is genuinely active, but rough edges like these are the difference between an interesting concept and a polished product. The honest framing for a sim-minded player is this: the dual-life resource loop has more design potential than anything the superhero genre has tried in years, and the flight alone is worth a test drive. The Steam Workshop integration hints at a future where modders shore up the content gaps. However, the combat depth, AI behavior, and mission variety that I would need to call this a complete system are all flagged as roadmap targets, not shipped features. Overall Steam sentiment sits in the Mostly Positive range across several hundred reviews, but recent scores have dipped toward Mixed as the player base catches up to the repetition ceiling. If you are the kind of person who buys Early Access titles to shape the trajectory and can tolerate a buggy, content-thin but mechanically novel foundation, the upside is real. If you need a polished loop today, the math does not yet work in your favor. Diego, Scout Team

Superhero Simulator

Superhero Simulator

15 sept 2025mightyraccoon! Studios
GamerScout opina

Part Spider-Man wish fulfillment, part rent-is-due anxiety sim: Goldpine City's double-life loop is a genuinely fresh idea that Early Access bugs and shallow combat are still working hard to undermine.

PC
Steam Deck Unsupported
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Mínimo histórico: €1.36

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I track resource loops and progression curves for a living, so when I see a game grafting life-sim survival mechanics onto an open-world action sandbox, my first instinct is to stress-test the feedback systems. After time with Superhero Simulator, the short answer is: the loop is real, and it is interesting, but the numbers underneath it are still sloppy. You play a superpowered resident of Goldpine City who has to juggle cape-on crime-fighting with a very unglamorous civilian income. Driving a taxi, flipping burgers, and working a cash register are your actual side jobs, with a in-game currency called Gollars keeping rent paid and gear upgraded. Neglect the day job and your hero progression stalls. Ignore the villain spawns too long and city reputation takes a hit. That tension between two resource pools is legitimately clever design for an indie debut. On the action side, you get flight, super speed, and super strength as your core mobility toolkit, and the flight mechanics are the clear standout. Soaring over Goldpine feels smooth and genuinely satisfying in a way that few small-studio open-world games manage. The comic-book visual style, with its cel-shaded buildings and vibrant districts, makes the traversal a pleasure. Boss encounters add some structure to the mission roster, and the emergent street events, rescuing civilians, stopping robberies, and handling a medical emergency mid-patrol, give the city a pulse. Steam Workshop support is already live, which is a smart move this early and signals the developer wants a modding community around the project. Here is where the strategy-brain in me starts circling problems on the spreadsheet. Combat is the weakest column in the whole design. The hit feedback is loose, enemy variety is thin right now, and what should be a satisfying power fantasy too often collapses into button-mashing against unresponsive targets. Mission structure is repetitive, with side jobs and crime events recycling quickly enough that the novelty window closes faster than the developers probably intended. The UI is clunky enough to frustrate controller users in particular, and the build still ships with collision bugs that can drop your character through the map geometry. The developer, whose background is in superhero short films and animation on YouTube, is patching weekly and the community update cadence is genuinely active, but rough edges like these are the difference between an interesting concept and a polished product. The honest framing for a sim-minded player is this: the dual-life resource loop has more design potential than anything the superhero genre has tried in years, and the flight alone is worth a test drive. The Steam Workshop integration hints at a future where modders shore up the content gaps. However, the combat depth, AI behavior, and mission variety that I would need to call this a complete system are all flagged as roadmap targets, not shipped features. Overall Steam sentiment sits in the Mostly Positive range across several hundred reviews, but recent scores have dipped toward Mixed as the player base catches up to the repetition ceiling. If you are the kind of person who buys Early Access titles to shape the trajectory and can tolerate a buggy, content-thin but mechanically novel foundation, the upside is real. If you need a polished loop today, the math does not yet work in your favor.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Etiquetas

singleplayerworkshopcloud-savestier:sub-5Dual-Life LoopLife Sim HybridFlight MechanicsCivilian JobsComic Book StyleOpen-World EventsReputation SystemWorkshop SupportNeeds-Management

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows (64-bit) 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Storage
12 GB available space
Graphics
NVidia GeForce GTX 1050
Processor
Intel Core i5-3550

Recomendados

OS
Windows (64-bit) 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Storage
12 GB available space
Graphics
NVidia GeForce GTX 1070
Processor
Intel Core i5-6400

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
mightyraccoon! Studios
Distribuidora
mightyraccoon! Studios
Fecha de lanzamiento
15 sept 2025

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Superhero Simulator?

Superhero Simulator está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Superhero Simulator?

Superhero Simulator se lanzó el 15 de septiembre de 2025.

¿Quién desarrolló Superhero Simulator?

Superhero Simulator fue desarrollado por mightyraccoon! Studios.