Compare Franky the Bumwalker: REBORN prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Onlyjoy's production. Published by Onlyjoy's production. Released on 3/3/2021. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie.

A cheerful oddity from a one-person studio: Franky walks on his bum through a hand-drawn cartoon world, and somehow that premise holds together better than it has any right to.

I have a soft spot for games that commit fully to a single absurd idea, and Franky the Bumwalker: REBORN commits hard. The central gag, a hero rendered permanently bum-ambulant after a teleportation mishap, is not just window dressing. It sets the entire emotional register of the game: warm, silly, unhurried, and oddly sincere. This is a short 2D casual adventure from a tiny solo studio, a re-release of the original Franky polished up to full HD, and it wears its budget origins openly without apology. The world Franky shuffles through is called Tubo World, and it is populated with the kind of creatures that feel genuinely invented rather than borrowed. The Lulambas, worm-like residents who travel underground, are a small but memorable detail that suggests a developer who thought about their world past the minimum viable level. The central quest revolves around the Zakruel, a mystical artifact said to grant happiness to whoever holds it, and the game leans into that premise with a light, fairytale sincerity. Do not come here expecting branching choices or systemic depth. This is a linear, story-forward walkthrough with light exploration, and the whole thing clocks in somewhere around the four-to-five hour range based on completion data from the achievement community. The soundtrack is credited to a composer named Monti, and from what the game projects sonically it matches the cartoonish, hand-drawn aesthetic with a lightness that keeps things from feeling tedious during slower sections. The art style leans colorful and cartoony, clearly 2D and hand-crafted in feel, the kind of visual language that ages better than photorealistic attempts from the same era. Controller support is included, which is the right call for a game this relaxed, and cloud saves mean you can pick it up and put it down across sessions without friction. There are 19 achievements to chase if that motivates you. The honest reservations are real and worth naming. The player base is tiny, coverage is nearly nonexistent, and the community around the game is quiet enough that you are essentially going in alone with no guides or fan discourse to lean on. The Steam review pool is small, though what exists skews positive. For players who need a rich feedback loop of community content, this will feel isolating. The linearity also means there is no second-playthrough incentive, and the runtime is short enough that value-per-hour math matters more than usual. That said, there is something genuinely charming about spending an afternoon with Franky. For players who appreciate a no-pressure casual adventure with a consistent comedic sensibility and hand-crafted visuals, this is the kind of quiet find that subscription bundles were made for. It knows what it is, ends when it should, and sends you off in a good mood. That is not nothing. Kai, Scout Team

Franky the Bumwalker: REBORN
AdventureCasualIndie

Franky the Bumwalker: REBORN

Mar 3, 2021Onlyjoy's production
GamerScout Says

A cheerful oddity from a one-person studio: Franky walks on his bum through a hand-drawn cartoon world, and somehow that premise holds together better than it has any right to.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Franky the Bumwalker: REBORN

I have a soft spot for games that commit fully to a single absurd idea, and Franky the Bumwalker: REBORN commits hard. The central gag, a hero rendered permanently bum-ambulant after a teleportation mishap, is not just window dressing. It sets the entire emotional register of the game: warm, silly, unhurried, and oddly sincere. This is a short 2D casual adventure from a tiny solo studio, a re-release of the original Franky polished up to full HD, and it wears its budget origins openly without apology. The world Franky shuffles through is called Tubo World, and it is populated with the kind of creatures that feel genuinely invented rather than borrowed. The Lulambas, worm-like residents who travel underground, are a small but memorable detail that suggests a developer who thought about their world past the minimum viable level. The central quest revolves around the Zakruel, a mystical artifact said to grant happiness to whoever holds it, and the game leans into that premise with a light, fairytale sincerity. Do not come here expecting branching choices or systemic depth. This is a linear, story-forward walkthrough with light exploration, and the whole thing clocks in somewhere around the four-to-five hour range based on completion data from the achievement community. The soundtrack is credited to a composer named Monti, and from what the game projects sonically it matches the cartoonish, hand-drawn aesthetic with a lightness that keeps things from feeling tedious during slower sections. The art style leans colorful and cartoony, clearly 2D and hand-crafted in feel, the kind of visual language that ages better than photorealistic attempts from the same era. Controller support is included, which is the right call for a game this relaxed, and cloud saves mean you can pick it up and put it down across sessions without friction. There are 19 achievements to chase if that motivates you. The honest reservations are real and worth naming. The player base is tiny, coverage is nearly nonexistent, and the community around the game is quiet enough that you are essentially going in alone with no guides or fan discourse to lean on. The Steam review pool is small, though what exists skews positive. For players who need a rich feedback loop of community content, this will feel isolating. The linearity also means there is no second-playthrough incentive, and the runtime is short enough that value-per-hour math matters more than usual. That said, there is something genuinely charming about spending an afternoon with Franky. For players who appreciate a no-pressure casual adventure with a consistent comedic sensibility and hand-crafted visuals, this is the kind of quiet find that subscription bundles were made for. It knows what it is, ends when it should, and sends you off in a good mood. That is not nothing. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:sub-5Walking SimulatorHand-drawnCartoonyShort ExperienceLinear NarrativeController FriendlyLightheartedAchievement Hunting

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
WINDOWS® 7, 8, 8.1, 10 (32/64-bit)
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
300 MB available space
Graphics
512 MB VRAM
Processor
Intel Core 2 Duo (or equivalent)

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Game Info

Developer
Onlyjoy's production
Publisher
Onlyjoy's production
Release Date
Mar 3, 2021

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What platforms is Franky the Bumwalker: REBORN available on?

Franky the Bumwalker: REBORN is available on PC.

When was Franky the Bumwalker: REBORN released?

Franky the Bumwalker: REBORN was released on 3 March 2021.

Who developed Franky the Bumwalker: REBORN?

Franky the Bumwalker: REBORN was developed by Onlyjoy's production.