Compare Blaster Shooter GunGuy! prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Adam DeLease. Published by Adam DeLease. Released on 8/10/2015. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie.

If you grew up memorizing Mega Man stages and have a soft spot for one-person passion projects, this no-frills rage platformer might scratch that itch. Just know the community is split almost down the middle.

I have a habit of sitting with games that most people scroll past in under three seconds, and Blaster Shooter GunGuy is exactly that kind of game. Built entirely by one developer, Adam DeLease, it wears its inspirations proudly: I Want to Be the Guy's punishing design philosophy fused with the jump-and-shoot rhythm of Mega Man. Whether that combination sounds exciting or exhausting probably tells you everything you need to know about whether this is for you. The structure is straightforward. You run through 56 levels spread across 7 worlds, each one capped by a boss fight. Three gems are hidden per stage, and hunting them down is the main incentive to replay levels rather than just blitz forward. Collecting them unlocks additional playable characters, each carrying their own stat differences: some swing harder, some reach higher platforms. It is not deep character customization, but the variety is genuine enough to encourage experimenting once you clear a world. Each world also contains a dedicated challenge stage that sits outside the normal progression, something closer to a gauntlet designed to test whether you have actually absorbed the game's movement logic or were just getting lucky. Where things get complicated is the reception. Steam users are split roughly 50/50, which is unusual even for games in this niche. The clearest frustration in the community centers on enemy placement and the absence of invincibility frames after taking damage, which is a design choice that will feel intentionally cruel to some and appropriately unforgiving to others, depending on your tolerance for the genre. The game has been updated post-launch with controller support, audio revisions, and difficulty tuning, so the version shipping today is not the same one that earned those early negative reviews. That matters. As a one-person project in the IWBTG lineage, GunGuy does not pretend to be something it is not. The pixel art is functional rather than lavish, the soundscape is minimal, and the whole thing clocks in around three to four hours on average for players who are not hunting collectibles. For a completionist run, the gem collection and challenge stages push that number up. What the game gets right is a certain earnestness: the lore hook (GunGuy must save his father, GunDad) is played with enough self-awareness that it never feels tedious, and the world-to-world variety means you are not grinding through identical corridors until the credits roll. If you are new to rage platformers, this is a rougher entry point than most. If you already know the genre and want something short, cheap, and solo-crafted, there is real honesty in what GunGuy offers. Just go in understanding the split community is not noise, it reflects a game with genuine friction baked into its design. Kai, Scout Team

Blaster Shooter GunGuy!
ActionAdventureIndie

Blaster Shooter GunGuy!

Aug 10, 2015Adam DeLease
GamerScout Says

If you grew up memorizing Mega Man stages and have a soft spot for one-person passion projects, this no-frills rage platformer might scratch that itch. Just know the community is split almost down the middle.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Blaster Shooter GunGuy!

I have a habit of sitting with games that most people scroll past in under three seconds, and Blaster Shooter GunGuy is exactly that kind of game. Built entirely by one developer, Adam DeLease, it wears its inspirations proudly: I Want to Be the Guy's punishing design philosophy fused with the jump-and-shoot rhythm of Mega Man. Whether that combination sounds exciting or exhausting probably tells you everything you need to know about whether this is for you. The structure is straightforward. You run through 56 levels spread across 7 worlds, each one capped by a boss fight. Three gems are hidden per stage, and hunting them down is the main incentive to replay levels rather than just blitz forward. Collecting them unlocks additional playable characters, each carrying their own stat differences: some swing harder, some reach higher platforms. It is not deep character customization, but the variety is genuine enough to encourage experimenting once you clear a world. Each world also contains a dedicated challenge stage that sits outside the normal progression, something closer to a gauntlet designed to test whether you have actually absorbed the game's movement logic or were just getting lucky. Where things get complicated is the reception. Steam users are split roughly 50/50, which is unusual even for games in this niche. The clearest frustration in the community centers on enemy placement and the absence of invincibility frames after taking damage, which is a design choice that will feel intentionally cruel to some and appropriately unforgiving to others, depending on your tolerance for the genre. The game has been updated post-launch with controller support, audio revisions, and difficulty tuning, so the version shipping today is not the same one that earned those early negative reviews. That matters. As a one-person project in the IWBTG lineage, GunGuy does not pretend to be something it is not. The pixel art is functional rather than lavish, the soundscape is minimal, and the whole thing clocks in around three to four hours on average for players who are not hunting collectibles. For a completionist run, the gem collection and challenge stages push that number up. What the game gets right is a certain earnestness: the lore hook (GunGuy must save his father, GunDad) is played with enough self-awareness that it never feels tedious, and the world-to-world variety means you are not grinding through identical corridors until the credits roll. If you are new to rage platformers, this is a rougher entry point than most. If you already know the genre and want something short, cheap, and solo-crafted, there is real honesty in what GunGuy offers. Just go in understanding the split community is not noise, it reflects a game with genuine friction baked into its design. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertrading-cardstier:sub-5Rage PlatformerCollectathonBoss RushUnlockable CharactersIWBTG-likeOne-Dev ProjectPrecision ShooterChallenge StagesPost-Launch Updates

Steam Deck & Linux

ProtonDB Platinum

Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 3 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7
Storage
200 MB available space
Graphics
ATI Radeon 4000 Series or Higher
Processor
AMD Sempron 2650 or better processor

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
Adam DeLease
Publisher
Adam DeLease
Release Date
Aug 10, 2015

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Frequently asked questions about Blaster Shooter GunGuy!

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What platforms is Blaster Shooter GunGuy! available on?

Blaster Shooter GunGuy! is available on PC.

When was Blaster Shooter GunGuy! released?

Blaster Shooter GunGuy! was released on 10 August 2015.

Who developed Blaster Shooter GunGuy!?

Blaster Shooter GunGuy! was developed by Adam DeLease.