Compare Bug-N-Out prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Neuron Games. Published by Neuron. Released on 5/3/2016. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Casual.

If your tolerance for arcade simplicity runs high and your session length runs short, Bug-N-Out scratches a very specific itch. Four Steam reviews and a coin-op premise tell you exactly what you're getting into.

I went in with low expectations and came out with a tidy mental picture of exactly who this game is for. Bug-N-Out is a wave-based, coin-op-style arcade shooter where you defend a series of planets against relentless insect swarms, no preamble, no save points, no loading screens between rounds. You drop in, you shoot bugs, you die, you try again. That loop is the whole game. The core mechanics are about as stripped-down as it gets on PC. You move, you shoot, and you grab power-ups ranging from speed boosts to nuclear warheads, cycling through them as waves escalate and enemy types gradually unlock. Each planet setting introduces a fresh batch of threats, which keeps the difficulty curve from going completely flat, but the underlying rhythm never really changes. If you are used to modern shoot-em-ups with upgrade trees, build diversity, or score-attack leaderboards, that stripped layer-cake will feel thin fast. Where the game does earn a little credit is in its commitment to the coin-op identity. Xbox controller support is in, keyboard works fine, and there are no menus that get in the way of a five-minute session. The power-up variety, especially landing a nuclear warhead at the right moment, produces those small bursts of satisfaction that old-school arcade design was built around. Amazon player comments note it has that quality of making you feel like you're at an arcade cabinet as a kid, which is either exactly what you want to hear or a polite way of saying the design stopped evolving in 1993. The honest problems are hard to ignore. Steam's review sample is tiny, only four reviews at roughly 50-50, which says less about quality and more about how little attention the game has attracted since 2016. There is no apparent community, no post-launch updates of note, and no competitive hooks to keep you returning. For a game that lives or dies by replayability, the lack of any leaderboard or scoring persistence is a real gap. Casual players looking for something to fill a 20-minute window might get their money's worth. Players who expect depth, progression systems, or even basic stat-tracking will hit the ceiling almost immediately. Bug-N-Out is the kind of game that knows its lane but never tries to widen it. That is admirable in a small-studio, budget-tier way, and genuinely frustrating if you wanted more. Treat it as digital pocket change entertainment, nothing more, and the no-frills wave shooting is harmless fun. Expect anything beyond that and you will feel the emptiness of the design within an hour. Alex, Scout Team

Bug-N-Out
ActionCasual

Bug-N-Out

May 3, 2016Neuron GamesNeuron
GamerScout Says

If your tolerance for arcade simplicity runs high and your session length runs short, Bug-N-Out scratches a very specific itch. Four Steam reviews and a coin-op premise tell you exactly what you're getting into.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Bug-N-Out

I went in with low expectations and came out with a tidy mental picture of exactly who this game is for. Bug-N-Out is a wave-based, coin-op-style arcade shooter where you defend a series of planets against relentless insect swarms, no preamble, no save points, no loading screens between rounds. You drop in, you shoot bugs, you die, you try again. That loop is the whole game. The core mechanics are about as stripped-down as it gets on PC. You move, you shoot, and you grab power-ups ranging from speed boosts to nuclear warheads, cycling through them as waves escalate and enemy types gradually unlock. Each planet setting introduces a fresh batch of threats, which keeps the difficulty curve from going completely flat, but the underlying rhythm never really changes. If you are used to modern shoot-em-ups with upgrade trees, build diversity, or score-attack leaderboards, that stripped layer-cake will feel thin fast. Where the game does earn a little credit is in its commitment to the coin-op identity. Xbox controller support is in, keyboard works fine, and there are no menus that get in the way of a five-minute session. The power-up variety, especially landing a nuclear warhead at the right moment, produces those small bursts of satisfaction that old-school arcade design was built around. Amazon player comments note it has that quality of making you feel like you're at an arcade cabinet as a kid, which is either exactly what you want to hear or a polite way of saying the design stopped evolving in 1993. The honest problems are hard to ignore. Steam's review sample is tiny, only four reviews at roughly 50-50, which says less about quality and more about how little attention the game has attracted since 2016. There is no apparent community, no post-launch updates of note, and no competitive hooks to keep you returning. For a game that lives or dies by replayability, the lack of any leaderboard or scoring persistence is a real gap. Casual players looking for something to fill a 20-minute window might get their money's worth. Players who expect depth, progression systems, or even basic stat-tracking will hit the ceiling almost immediately. Bug-N-Out is the kind of game that knows its lane but never tries to widen it. That is admirable in a small-studio, budget-tier way, and genuinely frustrating if you wanted more. Treat it as digital pocket change entertainment, nothing more, and the no-frills wave shooting is harmless fun. Expect anything beyond that and you will feel the emptiness of the design within an hour. Alex, Scout Team

Tags

steamWave ShooterCoin-Op StyleController SupportShort SessionsBudget ArcadeAlien InsectsScore AttackNo Save System

System Requirements

System requirements for Bug-N-Out aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Steam
50%(4)

Game Info

Developer
Neuron Games
Publisher
Neuron
Release Date
May 3, 2016

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