Compare Crime Scene Cleaner prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by President Studio. Published by President Studio. Released on 8/14/2024. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action, Simulation.

PowerWash Simulator with mob ties and actual stakes: scrubbing blood, bagging bodies, and pocketing stolen watches is far more engaging than it has any right to be.

My spreadsheet instincts told me to skip this one. A cleaning sim with no build trees, no faction management, no late-game snowball? Hard pass. Then I watched someone spend forty minutes methodically hunting a single blood smear under UV light and I caved. Fifteen hours later I understand the compulsion completely. You play as Kovalsky, a widowed school janitor who starts taking mob cleanup jobs to cover his daughter's medical bills. The setup is pure Breaking Bad on a mop budget, and the game leans into it with dry, sarcastic in-character commentary that undercuts any attempt at taking the narrative too seriously. The story itself is thin and ends without much resolution, which is a genuine weak point. But the levels do something smarter than the plot: each crime scene tells its own contained story through environmental detail alone. A summer camp with eight bodies arranged like a drug-fuelled accident. A mob-owned pizzeria that went very wrong. A museum that hides more than paintings. The locations are varied enough that the moment Kovalsky's phone rings with a new job, you actually want to know what mess is waiting. The cleaning toolkit has real mechanical depth, which is what keeps the loop from collapsing into tedium. Mops cover ground fast but push small items around and get dirty quickly, requiring regular bucket changes. Sponges are slower but safe around fragile objects like glasses and vases. The pressure washer is satisfying for outdoor spaces but needs refilling. UV lamps expose hidden bloodstains, and the "Cleaner Sense" skill highlights misplaced objects, which becomes genuinely useful on the larger multi-floor stages that can run two-plus hours each. Skill points earned per job upgrade your tools and unlock new nozzles and lamp intensities, giving the progression a light but satisfying arc. Stealing valuables from the scene adds an optional layer: hidden switches lead to secret rooms, and certain items can be pocketed for extra cash. It is a small systemic wrinkle that rewards thorough players without punishing anyone who ignores it. The honest critique is repetition. Reviewers and players consistently flag that the second half of the campaign introduces almost no new mechanics, and completionists hunting 100% cleanup scores will occasionally lose twenty minutes to a single bullet that rolled behind a radiator. Post-campaign content is sparse in the base experience, though the Nightmare Update added ten reworked maps with a hint-free "True Cleaner Mode" and unlockable tool skins, which meaningfully extends replayability for players who want harder targets. A free Prologue demo is also available on Steam, letting you sample a full level before committing. On the player-sentiment side, Steam sits at overwhelmingly positive across nearly fifteen thousand reviews, and Metacritic critical scores cluster in the low-to-mid eighties across platforms. That consensus is honest: this is a well-executed niche title, not a genre-defining landmark. For anyone who bounced off PowerWash Simulator because it felt empty, Crime Scene Cleaner is the answer. The grime has context. The tools have trade-offs. The levels have secrets. The gore will filter out a chunk of potential players, which is fair, but if blood in a video game does not bother you, this is one of the more thoughtfully designed relaxation-sims in recent memory. Approach each level like an efficiency problem, and it rewards the mindset. Diego, Scout Team

Crime Scene Cleaner
ActionSimulation

Crime Scene Cleaner

Aug 14, 2024President Studio
GamerScout Says

PowerWash Simulator with mob ties and actual stakes: scrubbing blood, bagging bodies, and pocketing stolen watches is far more engaging than it has any right to be.

PCXbox
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Screenshots & Media

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About Crime Scene Cleaner

My spreadsheet instincts told me to skip this one. A cleaning sim with no build trees, no faction management, no late-game snowball? Hard pass. Then I watched someone spend forty minutes methodically hunting a single blood smear under UV light and I caved. Fifteen hours later I understand the compulsion completely. You play as Kovalsky, a widowed school janitor who starts taking mob cleanup jobs to cover his daughter's medical bills. The setup is pure Breaking Bad on a mop budget, and the game leans into it with dry, sarcastic in-character commentary that undercuts any attempt at taking the narrative too seriously. The story itself is thin and ends without much resolution, which is a genuine weak point. But the levels do something smarter than the plot: each crime scene tells its own contained story through environmental detail alone. A summer camp with eight bodies arranged like a drug-fuelled accident. A mob-owned pizzeria that went very wrong. A museum that hides more than paintings. The locations are varied enough that the moment Kovalsky's phone rings with a new job, you actually want to know what mess is waiting. The cleaning toolkit has real mechanical depth, which is what keeps the loop from collapsing into tedium. Mops cover ground fast but push small items around and get dirty quickly, requiring regular bucket changes. Sponges are slower but safe around fragile objects like glasses and vases. The pressure washer is satisfying for outdoor spaces but needs refilling. UV lamps expose hidden bloodstains, and the "Cleaner Sense" skill highlights misplaced objects, which becomes genuinely useful on the larger multi-floor stages that can run two-plus hours each. Skill points earned per job upgrade your tools and unlock new nozzles and lamp intensities, giving the progression a light but satisfying arc. Stealing valuables from the scene adds an optional layer: hidden switches lead to secret rooms, and certain items can be pocketed for extra cash. It is a small systemic wrinkle that rewards thorough players without punishing anyone who ignores it. The honest critique is repetition. Reviewers and players consistently flag that the second half of the campaign introduces almost no new mechanics, and completionists hunting 100% cleanup scores will occasionally lose twenty minutes to a single bullet that rolled behind a radiator. Post-campaign content is sparse in the base experience, though the Nightmare Update added ten reworked maps with a hint-free "True Cleaner Mode" and unlockable tool skins, which meaningfully extends replayability for players who want harder targets. A free Prologue demo is also available on Steam, letting you sample a full level before committing. On the player-sentiment side, Steam sits at overwhelmingly positive across nearly fifteen thousand reviews, and Metacritic critical scores cluster in the low-to-mid eighties across platforms. That consensus is honest: this is a well-executed niche title, not a genre-defining landmark. For anyone who bounced off PowerWash Simulator because it felt empty, Crime Scene Cleaner is the answer. The grime has context. The tools have trade-offs. The levels have secrets. The gore will filter out a chunk of potential players, which is fair, but if blood in a video game does not bother you, this is one of the more thoughtfully designed relaxation-sims in recent memory. Approach each level like an efficiency problem, and it rewards the mindset. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:aaaEnvironmental StorytellingZen GameplayTool ProgressionDark HumorNightmare ModeEvidence DisposalSecret RoomsGore-Heavy

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 29 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10/11
Memory
16 GB RAM
Storage
35 GB available space
Graphics
GTX 1060 (Integrated Graphic Cards are not supported)
Processor
i5-7500 or similar
Additional Notes
Integrated Graphic Cards are not supported. Intel ARC series may not be supported yet.

Recommended

OS
Windows 10/11
Memory
16 GB RAM
Storage
35 GB available space
Graphics
RTX 2070 SUPER (Integrated Graphic Cards are not supported)
Processor
i5-10600 or similar
Additional Notes
Integrated Graphic Cards are not supported. Intel ARC series may not be supported yet.

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
President Studio
Publisher
President Studio
Release Date
Aug 14, 2024

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Frequently asked questions about Crime Scene Cleaner

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What platforms is Crime Scene Cleaner available on?

Crime Scene Cleaner is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Crime Scene Cleaner released?

Crime Scene Cleaner was released on 14 August 2024.

Who developed Crime Scene Cleaner?

Crime Scene Cleaner was developed by President Studio.