Compare BidKing prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by MindSurge Network & Games. Published by Elegoose Games. Released on 4/15/2026. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Indie, Massively Multiplayer, Simulation, Sports, Strategy.

A four-player psychological auction game with a sharp concept undermined by pay-to-win mechanics, server problems, and AI-generated assets that have soured a majority of its player base.

My spreadsheet instincts told me this had potential: a four-player sealed-bid auction game where information asymmetry is the central resource, every collector runs a unique skill set derived from their character background, and the win condition is as much about forcing rivals into bad bids as it is about scoring bargains yourself. On paper, BidKing sits in a genuinely underserved niche. In practice, the execution drags it down hard. The core loop is worth understanding before you dismiss or buy in. Each match pits four collectors against each other across rounds of auction, with two distinct modes: Sealed Bid Mode, where every amount is confidential and you are working purely off opponent behavior and your own intel, and Standard Mode, where visible bids become a psychological weapon in themselves. Character skills add a meaningful layer, some letting you peek at an opponent's bidding range, others letting you more accurately appraise a collectible's true value. The Gradual Collectible Reveal mechanic, which surfaces an item's real worth piece by piece through an unboxing sequence after the auction closes, is legitimately clever. It creates genuine tension between what you paid and what you actually got, and makes the information-gathering phase feel consequential rather than decorative. That's the good news, and it is real. The bad news is structural. Community feedback has been consistent and damning on three fronts. First, server stability is a recurring complaint: disconnections, lost in-game currency after restarts, and lag that undermines a game mode where timing and behavioral reads matter. Second, the pay-to-win problem is hard to argue with: players with access to the expanded content tier report statistically better outcomes, which collapses the premise of a pure wits-based competition. Third, the character skill system can misfire when randomly assigned auction information conflicts with your collector's skill profile, actively handing you a disadvantage rather than a neutral start. The overall Steam review picture, sitting mostly negative across more than twenty thousand reviews, is not a small sample fluke. It reflects a game whose skeleton is interesting but whose body is held together with duct tape. The use of AI-generated art for scene images, loading screens, and select item icons is disclosed by the developer, and it has contributed to a vocal negative reaction from a portion of the community. Whether that matters to you personally is your call, but it is worth knowing before you spend anything. If the concept genuinely appeals to you, the free demo exists and is the correct entry point. The sealed-bid format with asymmetric collector skills is an idea that could work well in a tighter, better-balanced package. Right now, between the server issues, the monetization balance, and the skill system misfires, BidKing does not yet deliver on the promise of a wits-only competition. Approach with low expectations and use the demo first. Diego, Scout Team

BidKing
CasualIndieMassively MultiplayerSimulationSportsStrategy

BidKing

Apr 15, 2026MindSurge Network & GamesElegoose Games
GamerScout Says

A four-player psychological auction game with a sharp concept undermined by pay-to-win mechanics, server problems, and AI-generated assets that have soured a majority of its player base.

PC
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About BidKing

My spreadsheet instincts told me this had potential: a four-player sealed-bid auction game where information asymmetry is the central resource, every collector runs a unique skill set derived from their character background, and the win condition is as much about forcing rivals into bad bids as it is about scoring bargains yourself. On paper, BidKing sits in a genuinely underserved niche. In practice, the execution drags it down hard. The core loop is worth understanding before you dismiss or buy in. Each match pits four collectors against each other across rounds of auction, with two distinct modes: Sealed Bid Mode, where every amount is confidential and you are working purely off opponent behavior and your own intel, and Standard Mode, where visible bids become a psychological weapon in themselves. Character skills add a meaningful layer, some letting you peek at an opponent's bidding range, others letting you more accurately appraise a collectible's true value. The Gradual Collectible Reveal mechanic, which surfaces an item's real worth piece by piece through an unboxing sequence after the auction closes, is legitimately clever. It creates genuine tension between what you paid and what you actually got, and makes the information-gathering phase feel consequential rather than decorative. That's the good news, and it is real. The bad news is structural. Community feedback has been consistent and damning on three fronts. First, server stability is a recurring complaint: disconnections, lost in-game currency after restarts, and lag that undermines a game mode where timing and behavioral reads matter. Second, the pay-to-win problem is hard to argue with: players with access to the expanded content tier report statistically better outcomes, which collapses the premise of a pure wits-based competition. Third, the character skill system can misfire when randomly assigned auction information conflicts with your collector's skill profile, actively handing you a disadvantage rather than a neutral start. The overall Steam review picture, sitting mostly negative across more than twenty thousand reviews, is not a small sample fluke. It reflects a game whose skeleton is interesting but whose body is held together with duct tape. The use of AI-generated art for scene images, loading screens, and select item icons is disclosed by the developer, and it has contributed to a vocal negative reaction from a portion of the community. Whether that matters to you personally is your call, but it is worth knowing before you spend anything. If the concept genuinely appeals to you, the free demo exists and is the correct entry point. The sealed-bid format with asymmetric collector skills is an idea that could work well in a tighter, better-balanced package. Right now, between the server issues, the monetization balance, and the skill system misfires, BidKing does not yet deliver on the promise of a wits-only competition. Approach with low expectations and use the demo first. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

multiplayermmopvponline-pvptier:sub-5Sealed-Bid AuctionsPsychological BluffingAsymmetric SkillsCollectible AppraisalPay-to-Win ConcernsInformation AsymmetryParty PvP

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Unsupported

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
windows 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 10
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
4 GB available space
Graphics
GTX 560
Processor
i5-3570K

Recommended

OS
windows 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
4 GB available space
Graphics
GTX 1080
Processor
i5-5350

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on BidKing.

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
MindSurge Network & Games
Publisher
Elegoose Games
Release Date
Apr 15, 2026

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

Buy smarter: helpful guides

Frequently asked questions about BidKing

Where can I buy BidKing cheapest?

Compare BidKing 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 BidKing available on?

BidKing is available on PC.

When was BidKing released?

BidKing was released on 15 April 2026.

Who developed BidKing?

BidKing was developed by MindSurge Network & Games and published by Elegoose Games.