Compare Abstract Driver prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Gamesforgames. Published by Gamesforgames. Released on 5/30/2023. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Casual, RPG, Simulation, Sports, Strategy.

Scored a 57% Mixed on Steam from only 21 reviews, Abstract Driver is a stripped-down tunnel runner built for one thing: achievement hunting to a synthwave beat. Approach it expecting anything deeper and you will be disappointed.

My first impression of Abstract Driver was that someone had taken the core loop of a tunnel-runner arcade game, stripped out every layer of mechanical complexity, and left the skeleton on a plate. You move through an endless cylindrical tube, dodge obstacles of varying types, rack up points to the pulse of synthwave music, and hit score thresholds that unlock Steam achievements. That is the full product. There is no progression system, no unlockable content, no leaderboard that matters to a competitive community. For a strategy-and-sim player like me, that absence of decision depth is noticeable inside the first five minutes. What the game does offer is a handful of keyboard-driven modes, toggled with the number keys, that let you adjust speed and change the visual type of the tunnel space. Slowing the pace down makes it approachable for someone who just wants to zone out; cranking the speed up introduces genuine reaction-time pressure. The obstacle variety is limited but serviceable for a game at this price tier. The synthwave soundtrack is the single component that could reasonably be called a strength: it gives the visuals something to bounce off, and the camera-rotation mechanic means you are, in a loose sense, conducting your view to the music rather than just steering past walls. The honest problem here is depth, or rather the complete absence of it. There is no build variety, no AI to outwit, no mod ecosystem, and the tutorial amounts to "move and avoid things." Steam reviewers land at a mixed 57% across 21 total votes, which is a small sample but directionally consistent with what you experience: some players find a brief meditative appeal; others bounce off the near-zero content ceiling within minutes. The discussion forum has a single active thread titled "hi." That tells you something about the community footprint. Who is this actually for? Realistically, it fits one profile: the achievement collector working through a bundle or a subscription catalogue who wants to clear a set of milestones in under an hour without installing anything demanding. For that person, Abstract Driver does exactly what it says. It runs, it plays synthwave, you hit point thresholds, the achievements pop. If you are arriving with any expectation of a rhythm game with chart depth, a tunnel-runner with escalating mechanical hooks, or a score-attack game with online context, reset those expectations hard before launching. Diego, Scout Team

Abstract Driver
ActionAdventureCasualRPGSimulationSportsStrategy

Abstract Driver

May 30, 2023Gamesforgames
GamerScout Says

Scored a 57% Mixed on Steam from only 21 reviews, Abstract Driver is a stripped-down tunnel runner built for one thing: achievement hunting to a synthwave beat. Approach it expecting anything deeper and you will be disappointed.

PC
Best Price Available
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Historical low: $1.32

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Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Abstract Driver

My first impression of Abstract Driver was that someone had taken the core loop of a tunnel-runner arcade game, stripped out every layer of mechanical complexity, and left the skeleton on a plate. You move through an endless cylindrical tube, dodge obstacles of varying types, rack up points to the pulse of synthwave music, and hit score thresholds that unlock Steam achievements. That is the full product. There is no progression system, no unlockable content, no leaderboard that matters to a competitive community. For a strategy-and-sim player like me, that absence of decision depth is noticeable inside the first five minutes. What the game does offer is a handful of keyboard-driven modes, toggled with the number keys, that let you adjust speed and change the visual type of the tunnel space. Slowing the pace down makes it approachable for someone who just wants to zone out; cranking the speed up introduces genuine reaction-time pressure. The obstacle variety is limited but serviceable for a game at this price tier. The synthwave soundtrack is the single component that could reasonably be called a strength: it gives the visuals something to bounce off, and the camera-rotation mechanic means you are, in a loose sense, conducting your view to the music rather than just steering past walls. The honest problem here is depth, or rather the complete absence of it. There is no build variety, no AI to outwit, no mod ecosystem, and the tutorial amounts to "move and avoid things." Steam reviewers land at a mixed 57% across 21 total votes, which is a small sample but directionally consistent with what you experience: some players find a brief meditative appeal; others bounce off the near-zero content ceiling within minutes. The discussion forum has a single active thread titled "hi." That tells you something about the community footprint. Who is this actually for? Realistically, it fits one profile: the achievement collector working through a bundle or a subscription catalogue who wants to clear a set of milestones in under an hour without installing anything demanding. For that person, Abstract Driver does exactly what it says. It runs, it plays synthwave, you hit point thresholds, the achievements pop. If you are arriving with any expectation of a rhythm game with chart depth, a tunnel-runner with escalating mechanical hooks, or a score-attack game with online context, reset those expectations hard before launching. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:sub-5Tunnel RunnerAchievement HuntingSynthwave SoundtrackCamera RotationObstacle DodgeScore AttackBundle FodderKeyboard-Only Controls

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 x64
Memory
1 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
200 MB available space
Graphics
Intel HD Graphics 512MB
Processor
Intel Celeron

Recommended

OS
Windows 11 x64
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Storage
200 MB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GT 820M 2048MB
Processor
Intel Dual Core

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Game Info

Developer
Gamesforgames
Publisher
Gamesforgames
Release Date
May 30, 2023

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Price History

2026-06-101.32(lowest)

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What platforms is Abstract Driver available on?

Abstract Driver is available on PC.

When was Abstract Driver released?

Abstract Driver was released on 30 May 2023.

Who developed Abstract Driver?

Abstract Driver was developed by Gamesforgames.