Compare Glitchpunk prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Dark Lord. Published by Daedalic Entertainment. Released on 10/16/2024. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Indie.

Three years in Early Access and a mixed reception at launch tell you most of what you need to know - but if GTA 2 is comfort food for you, Glitchpunk still scratches an itch nobody else is bothering to scratch right now.

I went in genuinely rooting for Glitchpunk. Dark Lord spent over three years in Early Access polishing a love letter to old-school top-down crime sandboxes, and there is something quietly admirable about a small studio swinging that hard at a genre most of the industry abandoned in 2001. The setup is charming in a grimy way: you are an android whose programming has glitched out, leaving you free to take mercenary contracts from gangs, cults, and corporations across four cities, including New Baltia and Outpost Texas, each with its own flavour of neon-soaked decay. The world has a genuinely moody aesthetic - neon lighting, gritty district design, and an in-game radio packed with futuristic beats and absurdist commercials that lands somewhere between GTA 3's radio satire and a B-movie fever dream. When the atmosphere clicks, it really does click. On the mechanical side, Glitchpunk is exactly what it says on the tin: run, shoot, steal cars, and hack. The hacking is the most interesting wrinkle here. As an android you can override NPC minds, triggering overkill states that send bystanders into combat frenzies - genuinely useful when police escalation kicks in. And the wanted system cranks up to ten stars, which means late-game chases can spiral into beautiful chaos. Weapons are bought at vending machines scattered across the map or looted off downed enemies, and a light RPG layer lets you upgrade parameters over time. None of it is deep, but the loop has a low-friction, arcade-brained momentum that works best in short sessions. Here is where I have to be straight with you, though. The community reception after full launch settled at roughly 47 percent positive on Steam, and the criticisms are not trivial. Driving controls are slippery in the old-school way - intentionally so, echoing GTA 2's notorious oversteer - but the game does not always feel like it earns that friction. Performance has been a recurring complaint, with frame-rate dips reported even on capable hardware. The writing leans hard into edgy-teenager energy, and the story is best treated as set dressing rather than something to invest in emotionally. Mission logic can break, waypoints occasionally point to nowhere, and the onboarding drops you into gang firefights before the controls feel natural in your hands. For a certain player, none of that will matter. If you have nostalgia for the chaos of GTA 1 and 2, if you find meditative value in roaming a neon city causing mayhem without needing a narrative reason, Glitchpunk offers a real, if rough, version of that. The in-game radio alone has more personality than the rest of the package combined, and the android-hacking mechanic adds a layer of creativity to firefights that the genre rarely bothers with. The pixel-adjacent art style divides opinion but I find it fits the sleazy, transhumanist tone well enough. Just go in knowing this is a game that knows what it is and does not particularly want to be more. Kai, Scout Team

Glitchpunk
ActionIndie

Glitchpunk

Oct 16, 2024Dark LordDaedalic Entertainment
GamerScout Says

Three years in Early Access and a mixed reception at launch tell you most of what you need to know - but if GTA 2 is comfort food for you, Glitchpunk still scratches an itch nobody else is bothering to scratch right now.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Glitchpunk

I went in genuinely rooting for Glitchpunk. Dark Lord spent over three years in Early Access polishing a love letter to old-school top-down crime sandboxes, and there is something quietly admirable about a small studio swinging that hard at a genre most of the industry abandoned in 2001. The setup is charming in a grimy way: you are an android whose programming has glitched out, leaving you free to take mercenary contracts from gangs, cults, and corporations across four cities, including New Baltia and Outpost Texas, each with its own flavour of neon-soaked decay. The world has a genuinely moody aesthetic - neon lighting, gritty district design, and an in-game radio packed with futuristic beats and absurdist commercials that lands somewhere between GTA 3's radio satire and a B-movie fever dream. When the atmosphere clicks, it really does click. On the mechanical side, Glitchpunk is exactly what it says on the tin: run, shoot, steal cars, and hack. The hacking is the most interesting wrinkle here. As an android you can override NPC minds, triggering overkill states that send bystanders into combat frenzies - genuinely useful when police escalation kicks in. And the wanted system cranks up to ten stars, which means late-game chases can spiral into beautiful chaos. Weapons are bought at vending machines scattered across the map or looted off downed enemies, and a light RPG layer lets you upgrade parameters over time. None of it is deep, but the loop has a low-friction, arcade-brained momentum that works best in short sessions. Here is where I have to be straight with you, though. The community reception after full launch settled at roughly 47 percent positive on Steam, and the criticisms are not trivial. Driving controls are slippery in the old-school way - intentionally so, echoing GTA 2's notorious oversteer - but the game does not always feel like it earns that friction. Performance has been a recurring complaint, with frame-rate dips reported even on capable hardware. The writing leans hard into edgy-teenager energy, and the story is best treated as set dressing rather than something to invest in emotionally. Mission logic can break, waypoints occasionally point to nowhere, and the onboarding drops you into gang firefights before the controls feel natural in your hands. For a certain player, none of that will matter. If you have nostalgia for the chaos of GTA 1 and 2, if you find meditative value in roaming a neon city causing mayhem without needing a narrative reason, Glitchpunk offers a real, if rough, version of that. The in-game radio alone has more personality than the rest of the package combined, and the android-hacking mechanic adds a layer of creativity to firefights that the genre rarely bothers with. The pixel-adjacent art style divides opinion but I find it fits the sleazy, transhumanist tone well enough. Just go in knowing this is a game that knows what it is and does not particularly want to be more. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayercooplocal-coopachievementstrading-cardstier:sub-5GTA-InspiredAndroid HackingTen-Star Wanted SystemSandbox ChaosLocal Co-opVending Machine LoadoutRadio AtmosphereRPG LiteGang Faction SystemPC Only

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Gold

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 9 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 SP 1
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
16 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 960 / Radeon RX 570
Processor
Intel Core i5-4590 / AMD Ryzen 5 1600
Sound Card
DirectX Compatible
Additional Notes
SSD strongly recommended

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 64bit
Memory
16 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
16 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 1070 / Radeon RX 590
Processor
Intel Core i7-8700 / AMD Ryzen 7 2700
Sound Card
DirectX Compatible
Additional Notes
SSD strongly recommended

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Game Info

Developer
Dark Lord
Publisher
Daedalic Entertainment
Release Date
Oct 16, 2024

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Frequently asked questions about Glitchpunk

Where can I buy Glitchpunk cheapest?

Compare Glitchpunk 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 Glitchpunk available on?

Glitchpunk is available on PC.

When was Glitchpunk released?

Glitchpunk was released on 16 October 2024.

Who developed Glitchpunk?

Glitchpunk was developed by Dark Lord and published by Daedalic Entertainment.