Don't Tax Me, Bro!
A scrappy three-button endless runner set in a procedurally generated Eastern European city, built on one joke that somehow holds up long enough to earn its asking price.
GamerScout Verdict
Best for score-chase fans who want a micro-indie runner with genuine personality and zero pretension about its short runtime.
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About Don't Tax Me, Bro!
I've spent time with a lot of micro-indie runners, and most of them exhaust their premise in about ninety seconds. Don't Tax Me, Bro does something slightly smarter: it wraps its single-screen gag around a handful of mechanics that give you genuine reasons to push one more run. The setup is exactly what the title promises. You play a shady businessman bolting through pixel-art Eastern European streets with two cops in hot pursuit. The city feels specific in a way most runners don't bother with: communist-era apartment blocks loom in the background, boxy Dacia cars sit in the road, stray dogs scatter underfoot, and flowerpots fall from seventh-floor windowsills with murderous intent. That geographic specificity is the game's strongest card. Developer Tibith, a one-couple Romanian studio, clearly built this from personal memory, and it shows in every lo-fi detail. Controls are three buttons. Movement is largely left-to-right but the level design opens up vertically enough that you are not locked to a single lane, which separates it from pure on-rails runners. The obstacle set gets surprisingly varied: manholes, trams, birds, falling objects, and gas tanks you can hurl back at pursuers. Power-ups include a coin vacuum, bodyguard hire, and a caffeinated sprint boost. Ragdoll physics on your 8-bit character mean every death is its own tiny comedy short. The loop is classic score-chase with Steam Leaderboards and Achievements giving light long-term structure. There is also a local split-screen multiplayer mode, which is a wild inclusion for something this small but works as a party curiosity. The honest ceiling here is low. Two maps is the total content offering, the difficulty scaling is blunt rather than elegant, and average playtime across the playerbase sits around four hours total. This is not a game you sink a weekend into; it is a game you open when you have fifteen minutes and a competitive streak. The pixel art is functional rather than pretty, and the soundtrack, five original Eastern European-flavored 8-bit tracks, does its job without lingering. Anyone expecting systemic depth or progression beyond cosmetic unlocks will bounce off fast. Who should care? Players who enjoy score-chasers with personality over production value, anyone with a soft spot for Eastern European humor and retro aesthetics, and people who want something genuinely different from the temple-run template. It is a first game from a two-person team, and for that context the polish is respectable. Just calibrate expectations: this is a lunch-break game, not a library staple.

Catch-all
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- Processor
- 1 GHz
- Memory
- 512 MB RAM
- Storage
- 100 MB available space
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Game Info
- Developer
- Tibith
- Publisher
- Unknown
- Release Date
- Jun 5, 2017