Compare Chariot prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Frima Studio. Published by Microids Indie. Released on 11/12/2014. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Indie. Metacritic score: 76/100.

Hauling a grumpy dead king through glowing caves sounds absurd until it clicks, and then you won't put the controller down until someone on the couch starts blaming the physics.

I have a soft spot for games built around one genuinely strange idea executed with total conviction, and Chariot is exactly that. Frima Studio looked at the couch co-op platformer and asked: what if the cargo itself was the puzzle? The result is 25 levels across five underground environments where every slope, ledge, and dark shaft is a negotiation between you, your rope, and a very heavy coffin on wheels. The physics model is the game's real handcraft. Pushing the chariot uphill demands careful body positioning; letting it roll downhill at speed turns into a breathless ride sequence. The tether mechanic adds a grapple-like dimension, letting you swing the chariot across chasms or hoist it onto platforms that look completely unreachable the first time you see them. There are also "life paths" that your character can walk but the chariot falls straight through, and "death rails" where the opposite applies, which forces you to split up and think spatially rather than just brute-force everything together. Loot lines the cave walls and the chariot itself is the only thing that can collect it, which means detours are never optional if you care about upgrades. Solo play is honest about what it costs you. The game is completable alone, and the methodical puzzle-solving has its own quiet rhythm, but some of the co-op-gated treasure sections simply go unreachable, and the physical coordination required to manage the chariot single-handedly is genuinely demanding. With a second player on the couch, something shifts: the physics become collaborative instead of combative, arguments about who is pulling too hard start feeling like part of the game rather than friction against it. The ghost king materialising periodically to harangue you about the quality of your gem haul is a small but consistent comic beat that keeps the mood light across a run-time that lands somewhere in the six-to-eight hour range depending on completionism. Critic scores cluster around the Metacritic 76 mark for good reason: the looter enemy sections that interrupt the cave traversal feel out of step with the zen groove the rest of the game earns, and a particularly dark second stage frustrated more than a few reviewers. These are real complaints, not nitpicks. Still, for players who chase couch co-op with the same energy others spend chasing soulslike challenge runs, Chariot offers something rare: a physical, tactile platformer where the laughs come from the mechanics rather than from scripted jokes. The visual style is warm and colourful without being busy, and the underground environments carry genuine atmosphere. Play it with someone you trust to not let the coffin roll off a cliff on purpose. Or do. The king would probably complain either way. Kai, Scout Team

Chariot

Chariot

Nov 12, 2014Frima StudioMicroids Indie
GamerScout Says

Hauling a grumpy dead king through glowing caves sounds absurd until it clicks, and then you won't put the controller down until someone on the couch starts blaming the physics.

PC
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Gold
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €1.02

GamerScout Verdict

Best for couch co-op fans who want a physics puzzle platformer with personality; solo play is workable but shows the seams.

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About Chariot

I have a soft spot for games built around one genuinely strange idea executed with total conviction, and Chariot is exactly that. Frima Studio looked at the couch co-op platformer and asked: what if the cargo itself was the puzzle? The result is 25 levels across five underground environments where every slope, ledge, and dark shaft is a negotiation between you, your rope, and a very heavy coffin on wheels. The physics model is the game's real handcraft. Pushing the chariot uphill demands careful body positioning; letting it roll downhill at speed turns into a breathless ride sequence. The tether mechanic adds a grapple-like dimension, letting you swing the chariot across chasms or hoist it onto platforms that look completely unreachable the first time you see them. There are also "life paths" that your character can walk but the chariot falls straight through, and "death rails" where the opposite applies, which forces you to split up and think spatially rather than just brute-force everything together. Loot lines the cave walls and the chariot itself is the only thing that can collect it, which means detours are never optional if you care about upgrades. Solo play is honest about what it costs you. The game is completable alone, and the methodical puzzle-solving has its own quiet rhythm, but some of the co-op-gated treasure sections simply go unreachable, and the physical coordination required to manage the chariot single-handedly is genuinely demanding. With a second player on the couch, something shifts: the physics become collaborative instead of combative, arguments about who is pulling too hard start feeling like part of the game rather than friction against it. The ghost king materialising periodically to harangue you about the quality of your gem haul is a small but consistent comic beat that keeps the mood light across a run-time that lands somewhere in the six-to-eight hour range depending on completionism. Critic scores cluster around the Metacritic 76 mark for good reason: the looter enemy sections that interrupt the cave traversal feel out of step with the zen groove the rest of the game earns, and a particularly dark second stage frustrated more than a few reviewers. These are real complaints, not nitpicks. Still, for players who chase couch co-op with the same energy others spend chasing soulslike challenge runs, Chariot offers something rare: a physical, tactile platformer where the laughs come from the mechanics rather than from scripted jokes. The visual style is warm and colourful without being busy, and the underground environments carry genuine atmosphere. Play it with someone you trust to not let the coffin roll off a cliff on purpose. Or do. The king would probably complain either way.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Tags

steamCouch Co-opPhysics PlatformerPuzzle PhysicsController RequiredTreasure HuntingSpeed Run ChallengesGrapple MechanicsEscort MechanicCave ExplorationCouch Co-op EssentialPhysics PuzzleTether MechanicsLoot CollectingDeliberate PacingCompletionist Friendly

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
Dual Core 2.5 GHz
Memory
2 GB RAM
Graphics
ATI Radeon HD 4850 / NVIDIA GeForce GTX 260
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
3 GB available space

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
76
Steam
81%(457)

Game Info

Developer
Frima Studio
Publisher
Microids Indie
Release Date
Nov 12, 2014

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Frequently asked questions about Chariot

How much does Chariot cost?

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What platforms is Chariot available on?

Chariot is available on PC.

When was Chariot released?

Chariot was released on 12 November 2014.

Who developed Chariot?

Chariot was developed by Frima Studio and published by Microids Indie.

Is Chariot worth buying?

Chariot holds a Metacritic score of 76/100, making it one of the standout Adventure titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.