Compare Dodge Rocket prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by HaDe Games. Published by My Way Games. Released on 8/27/2019. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Casual, Indie.

Mouse-steered rocket combat with a quirky self-referential twist - you are the rocket, and you fire rockets. Beats a slow Tuesday, but don't expect depth beyond the scoreboard.

I've spent enough time with micro-priced Steam curios to know exactly what Dodge Rocket is before the first wave clears: a small, handmade thing that commits fully to one single idea and asks nothing of you beyond reflexes and a mouse. That self-awareness, intentional or not, is quietly charming. HaDe Games builds these compact survival toys with a consistency that suggests genuine fondness for the format, and Dodge Rocket is one of their tidier efforts. The central conceit is almost comedically literal. You pilot a rocket through open space, steering it by chasing your mouse cursor. The catch is that your cursor controls both movement and the aim of the rockets you fire, which means dodging and shooting are in constant mechanical tension. Swing too hard to evade an alien ship and your own projectiles arc wildly off target. It is a small, surprising layer of coordination that keeps the first handful of waves from feeling brainless. Waves are timed, enemy density increases with each one, and your score climbs with every kill you rack up before the run ends. Clean, readable loop. Where the game is honest with itself is in its scope. There is no progression system, no unlockable hull upgrades, no secondary weapon modes. What you see in the first sixty seconds is the entire game. For some players that is a dealbreaker. For others - the kind who still have Asteroids muscle memory stored somewhere in their hands - the stripped-back survival format is the point. The Steam community, small as it is, sits at a strong positive ratio, which suggests the people who actually sought this out largely found what they came for. The presentation is modest. Expect simple space visuals and a no-frills UI rather than anything atmospheric. There is no layered soundscape to get lost in, no pixel art hand-crafted with visible love for each frame. Dodge Rocket is purely mechanical in its pleasures. That is not a condemnation - it is just the honest shape of the thing. Think of it as a browser game elevated just enough to live on your Steam library shelf without embarrassment. If you are a completionist chasing achievements, a score-chaser who genuinely enjoys the ritual of one-more-run survival loops, or someone building a casual co-stream game that chat can backseat in real time, this fits the niche without fuss. It will not hold attention for an afternoon the way even a modest roguelite would. Sessions are short by design, and the design knows it. Kai, Scout Team

Dodge Rocket
ActionCasualIndie

Dodge Rocket

Aug 27, 2019HaDe GamesMy Way Games
GamerScout Says

Mouse-steered rocket combat with a quirky self-referential twist - you are the rocket, and you fire rockets. Beats a slow Tuesday, but don't expect depth beyond the scoreboard.

PC
Best Price Available
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Historical low: $0.26

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Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Dodge Rocket

I've spent enough time with micro-priced Steam curios to know exactly what Dodge Rocket is before the first wave clears: a small, handmade thing that commits fully to one single idea and asks nothing of you beyond reflexes and a mouse. That self-awareness, intentional or not, is quietly charming. HaDe Games builds these compact survival toys with a consistency that suggests genuine fondness for the format, and Dodge Rocket is one of their tidier efforts. The central conceit is almost comedically literal. You pilot a rocket through open space, steering it by chasing your mouse cursor. The catch is that your cursor controls both movement and the aim of the rockets you fire, which means dodging and shooting are in constant mechanical tension. Swing too hard to evade an alien ship and your own projectiles arc wildly off target. It is a small, surprising layer of coordination that keeps the first handful of waves from feeling brainless. Waves are timed, enemy density increases with each one, and your score climbs with every kill you rack up before the run ends. Clean, readable loop. Where the game is honest with itself is in its scope. There is no progression system, no unlockable hull upgrades, no secondary weapon modes. What you see in the first sixty seconds is the entire game. For some players that is a dealbreaker. For others - the kind who still have Asteroids muscle memory stored somewhere in their hands - the stripped-back survival format is the point. The Steam community, small as it is, sits at a strong positive ratio, which suggests the people who actually sought this out largely found what they came for. The presentation is modest. Expect simple space visuals and a no-frills UI rather than anything atmospheric. There is no layered soundscape to get lost in, no pixel art hand-crafted with visible love for each frame. Dodge Rocket is purely mechanical in its pleasures. That is not a condemnation - it is just the honest shape of the thing. Think of it as a browser game elevated just enough to live on your Steam library shelf without embarrassment. If you are a completionist chasing achievements, a score-chaser who genuinely enjoys the ritual of one-more-run survival loops, or someone building a casual co-stream game that chat can backseat in real time, this fits the niche without fuss. It will not hold attention for an afternoon the way even a modest roguelite would. Sessions are short by design, and the design knows it. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:sub-5Score AttackMouse-ControlledSpace ShooterShort SessionsWave SurvivalTwitch CasualMicro-Indie

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7/9/10
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
500 MB available space
Graphics
Standard HD graphics Driver
Processor
Core i3
Sound Card
Standard sound card / Motherboard sound
Additional Notes
Game runs in locked 60FPS

Recommended

OS
Windows 7/9/10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
500 MB available space
Graphics
Standard HD graphics Driver
Processor
Core i5
Sound Card
Standard sound card / Motherboard sound
Additional Notes
Game runs in locked 60FPS

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
HaDe Games
Publisher
My Way Games
Release Date
Aug 27, 2019

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Price History

2026-06-050.26(lowest)

Frequently asked questions about Dodge Rocket

Where can I buy Dodge Rocket cheapest?

Compare Dodge Rocket prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Dodge Rocket available on?

Dodge Rocket is available on PC.

When was Dodge Rocket released?

Dodge Rocket was released on 27 August 2019.

Who developed Dodge Rocket?

Dodge Rocket was developed by HaDe Games and published by My Way Games.