Compare Bionic Bay prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Psychoflow Studio. Published by Kepler Interactive. Released on 4/16/2025. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Casual, Indie, Racing. Metacritic score: 87/100.

Precision platforming meets physics chaos: swap places with objects, freeze time, flip gravity, and die in spectacular ragdoll fashion across 23 levels of biomechanical nightmare. Controller required, couch co-op absent, but solo players who love a challenge will feel every hard-won checkpoint.

I will be upfront: Bionic Bay is not the game you throw on at a Saturday night session with three friends who have had a few drinks. There is no split-screen, no drop-in co-op, no local multiplayer of any kind. This is a focused, demanding solo experience, and once you accept that going in, it delivers something genuinely impressive. The core hook is the Swap mechanic. You mark an object in the environment, then teleport into its position while it takes yours. Sounds simple. The reality is that the game keeps stacking complications on top of that foundation until you are timing a swap mid-air, threading through bouncing laser balls, and bracing for a gravity flip all in the same sequence. Abilities unlock gradually across the 23 levels: Knuckles (a telekinetic punch to hurl objects), ChronoLag (a time-freeze that buys precious fractions of a second around fast-moving hazards), and gravity inversion that completely rewrites how you read a room. There is no double jump, no air dash, no safety net of traditional platformer conventions. You work with what the world gives you, which is simultaneously the game's biggest strength and its sharpest edge. The physics engine is the wildcard. Bouncing objects, cascading explosions, falling debris, spinning fans and freeze rays all interact dynamically, which means the same room can play out differently on consecutive attempts. That unpredictability is thrilling when it goes your way and quietly maddening when it does not. A few sections lean too hard into that randomness, making them feel more like rerolling dice than testing skill. The beautiful, dense pixel art aesthetic adds another layer of friction: silhouetted environments look striking but can obscure interactive objects and hide the correct path, leading to deaths that feel earned by the art direction rather than the player. Generous, near-instant checkpointing rescues the experience from genuine frustration, and it is the single best accessibility decision the developers made. On the multiplayer side, there is an online mode with remixed levels, ghost data, and global leaderboards built explicitly for speedrunners. If you are the type who obsesses over shaving half a second off a run, this is a legitimate reason to keep the game installed well past the campaign credits. For everyone else, it is a nice bonus that does not paper over the singleplayer-only nature of the package. Steam Deck owners will be pleased to know the game runs cleanly on Valve's handheld, though the tiny on-screen text is worth flagging for that audience. Controller play is strongly recommended over keyboard and mouse for anything involving precise swap timing. Bionic Bay lands at an 87 on Metacritic and an 84% positive rating across hundreds of Steam reviews, which lines up with my read of it: a confident, mechanically inventive precision platformer that earns its difficulty through clever design more often than cheap tricks. The story is almost entirely absent, the oppressive industrial biomechanical atmosphere will not be for everyone, and casual players will bounce off the precision demands early. But for anyone who measures a good platformer by how satisfying each new room feels once it clicks, this is one of the more rewarding examples the genre has produced recently. Riley, Scout Team

Bionic Bay
ActionAdventureCasualIndieRacing

Bionic Bay

Apr 16, 2025Psychoflow StudioKepler Interactive
GamerScout Says

Precision platforming meets physics chaos: swap places with objects, freeze time, flip gravity, and die in spectacular ragdoll fashion across 23 levels of biomechanical nightmare. Controller required, couch co-op absent, but solo players who love a challenge will feel every hard-won checkpoint.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

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About Bionic Bay

I will be upfront: Bionic Bay is not the game you throw on at a Saturday night session with three friends who have had a few drinks. There is no split-screen, no drop-in co-op, no local multiplayer of any kind. This is a focused, demanding solo experience, and once you accept that going in, it delivers something genuinely impressive. The core hook is the Swap mechanic. You mark an object in the environment, then teleport into its position while it takes yours. Sounds simple. The reality is that the game keeps stacking complications on top of that foundation until you are timing a swap mid-air, threading through bouncing laser balls, and bracing for a gravity flip all in the same sequence. Abilities unlock gradually across the 23 levels: Knuckles (a telekinetic punch to hurl objects), ChronoLag (a time-freeze that buys precious fractions of a second around fast-moving hazards), and gravity inversion that completely rewrites how you read a room. There is no double jump, no air dash, no safety net of traditional platformer conventions. You work with what the world gives you, which is simultaneously the game's biggest strength and its sharpest edge. The physics engine is the wildcard. Bouncing objects, cascading explosions, falling debris, spinning fans and freeze rays all interact dynamically, which means the same room can play out differently on consecutive attempts. That unpredictability is thrilling when it goes your way and quietly maddening when it does not. A few sections lean too hard into that randomness, making them feel more like rerolling dice than testing skill. The beautiful, dense pixel art aesthetic adds another layer of friction: silhouetted environments look striking but can obscure interactive objects and hide the correct path, leading to deaths that feel earned by the art direction rather than the player. Generous, near-instant checkpointing rescues the experience from genuine frustration, and it is the single best accessibility decision the developers made. On the multiplayer side, there is an online mode with remixed levels, ghost data, and global leaderboards built explicitly for speedrunners. If you are the type who obsesses over shaving half a second off a run, this is a legitimate reason to keep the game installed well past the campaign credits. For everyone else, it is a nice bonus that does not paper over the singleplayer-only nature of the package. Steam Deck owners will be pleased to know the game runs cleanly on Valve's handheld, though the tiny on-screen text is worth flagging for that audience. Controller play is strongly recommended over keyboard and mouse for anything involving precise swap timing. Bionic Bay lands at an 87 on Metacritic and an 84% positive rating across hundreds of Steam reviews, which lines up with my read of it: a confident, mechanically inventive precision platformer that earns its difficulty through clever design more often than cheap tricks. The story is almost entirely absent, the oppressive industrial biomechanical atmosphere will not be for everyone, and casual players will bounce off the precision demands early. But for anyone who measures a good platformer by how satisfying each new room feels once it clicks, this is one of the more rewarding examples the genre has produced recently. Riley, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:aaaPhysics PlatformerSwap MechanicSpeedrun LeaderboardsPrecision MovementTime ManipulationRagdoll PhysicsController RecommendedCheckpoint GenerousNo MultiplayerBiomechanical Aesthetic

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 4 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 64 bit
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
3 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 or better
Processor
2.8GHz

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
87

Game Info

Developer
Psychoflow Studio
Publisher
Kepler Interactive
Release Date
Apr 16, 2025

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Price History

2026-06-102.65(lowest)

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How much does Bionic Bay cost?

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What platforms is Bionic Bay available on?

Bionic Bay is available on PC.

When was Bionic Bay released?

Bionic Bay was released on 16 April 2025.

Who developed Bionic Bay?

Bionic Bay was developed by Psychoflow Studio and published by Kepler Interactive.

Is Bionic Bay worth buying?

Bionic Bay holds a Metacritic score of 87/100, making it one of the standout Action titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.