Compare Bunker Punks prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Ninja Robot Dinosaur. Published by Ninja Robot Dinosaur. Released on 5/28/2018. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Indie.

A scrappy rogue-lite FPS where you run a rebel crew, raid corporate bunkers, and upgrade your hideout between runs. Rough around the edges, but the loop has teeth.

Bunker Punks is a first-person shooter with rogue-lite structure, set in a grimy dystopian world where megacorps run everything and you run a small cell of insurgents trying to tear them down. The pitch is straightforward: pick a runner from your crew, storm a procedurally generated corporate facility, grab weapons and supplies, get out alive, then spend your loot upgrading the bunker and training your people for the next raid. Repeat until the revolution succeeds or your crew is dead. It is not a complicated concept, and the game does not dress it up with cutscenes or lore dumps. What you get is the loop itself, raw and functional. The shooting feels serviceable rather than exceptional. Guns have weight and the enemies push back hard enough that you cannot just sprint through rooms. The procedural layouts keep individual runs from feeling identical, though after a few hours the tile-set vocabulary becomes familiar. Where the game earns its place is in the meta layer. Managing your bunker, deciding which recruits to train, which rooms to build, which supplies to hoard, gives each run a stakes quality that a straight shooter would not have. Losing a runner you have leveled up genuinely stings. That small emotional investment is doing more work than it probably should, but it works. The rough patches are real and worth naming. The visual presentation is functional but thin. Enemy variety runs dry sooner than the difficulty curve would like. Some procedural layouts produce rooms that are more frustrating than challenging, and the AI can behave erratically in tight corridors. With a 72 percent positive rating on Steam, the player base is split, and the gap between the people who click with the loop and the people who bounce off the jank is visible in the reviews. This is a one-developer project, and it shows in both the charm and the unpolished corners. The audience for Bunker Punks is specific. If you like rogue-lite FPS games and you have already burned through the genre's bigger names, this one offers a crew-management angle that most of its peers skip. If you want a tight, polished shooter with satisfying gunplay as the headline, you will likely be underwhelmed. The dystopian setting never gets developed enough to carry atmosphere on its own, so you are leaning on the mechanical loop almost entirely. For players who find that loop engaging, there is a decent number of hours here. For players expecting narrative texture or audiovisual flair, it runs thin. Ninja Robot Dinosaur built something scrappy and earnest. It does not have a composer scoring each raid or pixel art that rewards a second look. What it has is a structure that respects your time in small sessions, a meta-game that makes losses feel meaningful, and a genuine attempt at a subgenre corner that is less crowded than it looks. I have a soft spot for solo-dev work that commits to a concept and ships it. Bunker Punks committed. Whether the execution lands for you depends entirely on how forgiving you are of rough edges when the core idea is sound. Kai, Scout Team

Bunker Punks
ActionIndie

Bunker Punks

May 28, 2018Ninja Robot Dinosaur
GamerScout Says

A scrappy rogue-lite FPS where you run a rebel crew, raid corporate bunkers, and upgrade your hideout between runs. Rough around the edges, but the loop has teeth.

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 Bunker Punks

Bunker Punks is a first-person shooter with rogue-lite structure, set in a grimy dystopian world where megacorps run everything and you run a small cell of insurgents trying to tear them down. The pitch is straightforward: pick a runner from your crew, storm a procedurally generated corporate facility, grab weapons and supplies, get out alive, then spend your loot upgrading the bunker and training your people for the next raid. Repeat until the revolution succeeds or your crew is dead. It is not a complicated concept, and the game does not dress it up with cutscenes or lore dumps. What you get is the loop itself, raw and functional. The shooting feels serviceable rather than exceptional. Guns have weight and the enemies push back hard enough that you cannot just sprint through rooms. The procedural layouts keep individual runs from feeling identical, though after a few hours the tile-set vocabulary becomes familiar. Where the game earns its place is in the meta layer. Managing your bunker, deciding which recruits to train, which rooms to build, which supplies to hoard, gives each run a stakes quality that a straight shooter would not have. Losing a runner you have leveled up genuinely stings. That small emotional investment is doing more work than it probably should, but it works. The rough patches are real and worth naming. The visual presentation is functional but thin. Enemy variety runs dry sooner than the difficulty curve would like. Some procedural layouts produce rooms that are more frustrating than challenging, and the AI can behave erratically in tight corridors. With a 72 percent positive rating on Steam, the player base is split, and the gap between the people who click with the loop and the people who bounce off the jank is visible in the reviews. This is a one-developer project, and it shows in both the charm and the unpolished corners. The audience for Bunker Punks is specific. If you like rogue-lite FPS games and you have already burned through the genre's bigger names, this one offers a crew-management angle that most of its peers skip. If you want a tight, polished shooter with satisfying gunplay as the headline, you will likely be underwhelmed. The dystopian setting never gets developed enough to carry atmosphere on its own, so you are leaning on the mechanical loop almost entirely. For players who find that loop engaging, there is a decent number of hours here. For players expecting narrative texture or audiovisual flair, it runs thin. Ninja Robot Dinosaur built something scrappy and earnest. It does not have a composer scoring each raid or pixel art that rewards a second look. What it has is a structure that respects your time in small sessions, a meta-game that makes losses feel meaningful, and a genuine attempt at a subgenre corner that is less crowded than it looks. I have a soft spot for solo-dev work that commits to a concept and ships it. Bunker Punks committed. Whether the execution lands for you depends entirely on how forgiving you are of rough edges when the core idea is sound. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

steamRogue-lite FPSBase ManagementCrew PermadeathDystopianSolo DeveloperResource ManagementProcedural LevelsRun-based

System Requirements

System requirements for Bunker Punks aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Steam
72%(435)

Game Info

Developer
Ninja Robot Dinosaur
Publisher
Ninja Robot Dinosaur
Release Date
May 28, 2018

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert