Compare Baby Storm prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Baby Corp. Published by Forever Entertainment S. A.. Released on 5/12/2023. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Casual, Indie, Simulation.

Couch co-op chaos that hits harder than it looks - bring three friends or don't bother chasing gold medals.

My spreadsheet instincts say this genre lives or dies on task prioritisation, and Baby Storm gets that equation mostly right. You play babysitter to a crèche full of feral toddlers across multiple worlds, juggling feeding runs, diaper changes, toy delivery, fight-breaking, and vacuum-robot deployment - all against a score-combo timer that resets every time a kid starts crying. That score-combo mechanic is the real design hook: it forces you to triage, decide which screaming infant to ignore, and watch helplessly as the combo drops anyway. The task list starts clean enough. Early levels introduce toys and hugs, then layer in diapers, food stations, swing duty, and mini-games that ask for timed button sequences mid-chaos. Later worlds throw in catapults, teleport devices, and toddlers with special powers that scramble item placement or physics. The level count is generous - at least four distinct worlds, each with around nine stages, and each stage ships with at least one new mechanic gimmick. From a pure content-per-hour standpoint, the game does not feel thin. The unlock loop, which gates new stages and cosmetic character items behind medal thresholds, gives completionists a reason to replay levels for gold rather than just clear them. Here is the honest caveat, though, and it is a significant one: this game is built for four-player local co-op first, and solo play is a distant afterthought. Request volume does not scale down meaningfully for a single babysitter, which means going it alone feels punishing rather than challenging. Controls also draw consistent criticism from reviewers - inputs can misfire in the thick of a messy level where multiple toddlers and items overlap, and that imprecision stings most when you are the only player absorbing every mistake. A reported post-launch bug where the game hangs on the round-end screen, requiring a task-manager kill, has also frustrated some PC players. Multiplayer, though, is a different situation entirely. With two to four people on the couch, task-splitting becomes a genuine tactical puzzle. One player can anchor the vacuum robot and sanitation loop while others handle feeding and toy requests. The game actively rewards role assignment, and the entropy of a badly-managed crèche creates the kind of shared panic that makes local co-op worth the effort. The visual presentation - cartoonish 3D environments, bright world themes including time-travel settings - is cheerful enough to soften the frustration spikes, and the soundtrack keeps the tempo high without grating on repeat playthroughs. If you are shopping solo or only have occasional drop-in partners, the control roughness and single-player imbalance will wear thin quickly. If you have a regular two-to-four person local group who found party co-op games too forgiving, Baby Storm's frantic pacing and constant mechanical escalation will keep a session running longer than expected. The mod ecosystem is essentially nonexistent and there is no online multiplayer, so what you see is what you get: a compact, scrappy couch experience that peaks hard in four-player and plateaus sharply outside of it. Diego, Scout Team

Baby Storm
ActionAdventureCasualIndieSimulation

Baby Storm

May 12, 2023Baby CorpForever Entertainment S. A.
GamerScout Says

Couch co-op chaos that hits harder than it looks - bring three friends or don't bother chasing gold medals.

PC
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About Baby Storm

My spreadsheet instincts say this genre lives or dies on task prioritisation, and Baby Storm gets that equation mostly right. You play babysitter to a crèche full of feral toddlers across multiple worlds, juggling feeding runs, diaper changes, toy delivery, fight-breaking, and vacuum-robot deployment - all against a score-combo timer that resets every time a kid starts crying. That score-combo mechanic is the real design hook: it forces you to triage, decide which screaming infant to ignore, and watch helplessly as the combo drops anyway. The task list starts clean enough. Early levels introduce toys and hugs, then layer in diapers, food stations, swing duty, and mini-games that ask for timed button sequences mid-chaos. Later worlds throw in catapults, teleport devices, and toddlers with special powers that scramble item placement or physics. The level count is generous - at least four distinct worlds, each with around nine stages, and each stage ships with at least one new mechanic gimmick. From a pure content-per-hour standpoint, the game does not feel thin. The unlock loop, which gates new stages and cosmetic character items behind medal thresholds, gives completionists a reason to replay levels for gold rather than just clear them. Here is the honest caveat, though, and it is a significant one: this game is built for four-player local co-op first, and solo play is a distant afterthought. Request volume does not scale down meaningfully for a single babysitter, which means going it alone feels punishing rather than challenging. Controls also draw consistent criticism from reviewers - inputs can misfire in the thick of a messy level where multiple toddlers and items overlap, and that imprecision stings most when you are the only player absorbing every mistake. A reported post-launch bug where the game hangs on the round-end screen, requiring a task-manager kill, has also frustrated some PC players. Multiplayer, though, is a different situation entirely. With two to four people on the couch, task-splitting becomes a genuine tactical puzzle. One player can anchor the vacuum robot and sanitation loop while others handle feeding and toy requests. The game actively rewards role assignment, and the entropy of a badly-managed crèche creates the kind of shared panic that makes local co-op worth the effort. The visual presentation - cartoonish 3D environments, bright world themes including time-travel settings - is cheerful enough to soften the frustration spikes, and the soundtrack keeps the tempo high without grating on repeat playthroughs. If you are shopping solo or only have occasional drop-in partners, the control roughness and single-player imbalance will wear thin quickly. If you have a regular two-to-four person local group who found party co-op games too forgiving, Baby Storm's frantic pacing and constant mechanical escalation will keep a session running longer than expected. The mod ecosystem is essentially nonexistent and there is no online multiplayer, so what you see is what you get: a compact, scrappy couch experience that peaks hard in four-player and plateaus sharply outside of it. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayercooplocal-coopachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:indieLocal Co-op PartyTime ManagementScore AttackCouch Co-opMini-gamesLevel GimmicksRole AssignmentChaos Sim

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
WIN7-64 bit
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
3 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 630 / Radeon HD 6570
Processor
Intel i3-2100 / AMD A8-5600k

Recommended

OS
Win7 -64 bit
Memory
4 GB RAM
Storage
3 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce GTX 650 / Radeon HD 7510
Processor
Intel i5-650 / AMD A10-5800K

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Game Info

Developer
Baby Corp
Publisher
Forever Entertainment S. A.
Release Date
May 12, 2023

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Frequently asked questions about Baby Storm

Where can I buy Baby Storm cheapest?

Compare Baby Storm prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Baby Storm available on?

Baby Storm is available on PC.

When was Baby Storm released?

Baby Storm was released on 12 May 2023.

Who developed Baby Storm?

Baby Storm was developed by Baby Corp and published by Forever Entertainment S. A..