
Monster Prom 3: Monster Roadtrip
Cozy, irreverent, and surprisingly strategic: Monster Roadtrip is what happens when Beautiful Glitch swaps dating sim stats for shared resource survival, and somehow the multiplayer chaos makes it better.
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About Monster Prom 3: Monster Roadtrip
I'll be upfront: narrative survival visual novels are not the genre I reach for first. My usual playlist runs more toward Paradox titles and supply-chain puzzles. But Monster Prom 3: Monster Roadtrip pulled me in at the structure level, and once it did, I could see exactly what Beautiful Glitch built here and why it resonates so hard with its audience. At its mechanical core, this is a shared-resource management game dressed in comic-book art and adult absurdist humour. Up to four players ride along with series regulars Polly Geist and Scott Howl, stopping at locations in a binary choice format every turn, then hitting a rest stop phase roughly every four turns for relationship-building or resource trading. The six road-trip resources work like a collective stat bar: let any one of them hit zero and the trip ends early, full stop. That shared-failure condition is the key design twist compared to the earlier Monster Prom games, where individual stat races created player-versus-player tension. Here the game offers separate competitive modes - "Prank Masterz" tracks Prank Dollars across players for a winner-takes-all angle - but the base experience is genuinely cooperative, which changes the feel completely. Endings are reached by pushing a specific resource to its goal value, and which resource dominates your run determines your destination. The system is legible: the game shows you which resources a stop can affect before you commit, with a few deliberate blind spots kept to maintain tension, a transparency upgrade the previous games lacked. Where this lands in genre terms is somewhere between a party board game and a roguelite visual novel. Runs are short enough to feel episodic, scenario variety is enormous, and the writing does the heavy lifting. The humour is crude, confident, and frequently very funny - scenarios range from biker-bar brawls against buff wizards to wedding crashing to Mad Max parody makeovers. Players with low tolerance for drug references, sexual humour, or what Beautiful Glitch themselves describe as "mature language in a humorous way" should know the content rating is Mature and earned. A trigger-warning toggle exists but it does not neutralise the tone. What it is not is a deep dating sim - romance is available as a secondary goal but the main drive is surviving the trip and reaching a destination. Players who booted this up expecting the seduction-focused loop of the first two games have flagged the shift as a disappointment. That is a fair warning: this is a pivot, not a continuation of formula. The solo experience holds up reasonably well given the resource system gives you something to actually think about, but the game was clearly designed with a group on a couch or in an online session in mind. Steam review sentiment is overwhelmingly positive across thousands of reviews, and the post-launch update cadence - adding locations, the Winter Update's new hitchhiker character Adrian, the Gacha Meta Shop, and additional DLC character packs - shows Beautiful Glitch treating this as a live title rather than a shipped box. On the critical side, some players find the survival mechanic sits awkwardly against the otherwise frictionless comedy tone, and the presentation is light by any technical benchmark. Do not come for audiovisual ambition. Come for hundreds of weird scenarios and the specific joy of group decision-making going sideways. For the strategy-curious player wondering if this fits: think of it less as a simulation and more as a lightweight co-op decision engine with a great content-to-runtime ratio. Each run is digestible, replayability is genuine given scenario variety, and the multiplayer modes including local, online co-op, and PvP add meaningful replay hooks. It is not a game that will test your optimization instincts under serious pressure, but the shared resource stakes give each stop a small, real consequence that keeps it from being pure passive reading. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
Steam Deck & Linux
Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 6 ProtonDB community reports.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7 or higher
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- Storage
- 2 GB available space
- Processor
- Anything from the last 5 years
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Game Info
- Developer
- Beautiful Glitch
- Publisher
- Beautiful Glitch
- Release Date
- Oct 21, 2022
