Compare Mr. Prepper prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Rejected Games. Published by PlayWay S.A.. Released on 3/18/2021. Available on PC, Mac, Xbox. Genres: Action, Adventure, Casual, Indie, RPG, Simulation.

Building a rocket under the noses of secret police sounds absurd, but that tension between maintaining a spotless citizen facade and secretly excavating a bunker underneath your house is genuinely compelling. PC is the right platform for it.

I went in expecting a lightweight casual sim and came out with a spreadsheet tracking which household items I could strip for copper without triggering the inspector. That surprise is the best thing Mr. Prepper has going for it. You play as a man under government surveillance in a satirical authoritarian suburb called Murricaville, and your one goal is to secretly build an underground bunker complex, craft a rocket, and escape. The twist that makes the resource loop interesting is that your raw material supply starts inside your own home. Dismantle the bookshelf for wood, the cookware for glass, the office chair for plastic. But take too many items and the periodic Agency inspection will flag your suspiciously bare living room. That push and pull between stripping your house for parts and maintaining the illusion of a model citizen is the game's sharpest design decision, and for a good stretch of the early-to-mid game it generates real tension. The crafting progression is structured around a tiered workbench system. You start by cobbling together basic ladders and lighting rigs, then unlock a furnace and steam generator once you reach workbench level two, which opens the path to farms, greenhouses, and eventually vehicle components and rocket parts. Each new room you excavate below the house needs power and light before it can function, so expansion planning has a genuine dependency chain. It is closer to a light management sim than a survival game in the hardcore sense: hunger and the Preparedness meter need watching, but the real bottleneck is always materials and time. Side quests from neighbourhood NPCs like an herbalist and huntress in the forest areas add resource variety and break up the grind, while trading with neighbours offers a slower but steadier alternative to scavenging. The honest caveat is that Mr. Prepper is a PC game at heart. On PC, where a mouse handles item placement and inventory navigation, the controls stay out of the way and the loop holds up. Console ports have drawn consistent criticism for clunky cursor-based controls that turn routine crafting into a friction exercise. If you are reading this on the PC storefront that is mostly a non-issue. The other structural weakness is a midgame lull: once the inspection rules are understood the tension deflates somewhat, and the grind for late-game rocket components can feel mechanical rather than strategic. The combat in outdoor exploration areas is minimal and not particularly interesting. The game also wears its political satire loudly, leaning hard on authoritarian America imagery, which some reviewers found heavy-handed rather than clever. The post-launch support is worth noting. Rejected Games has continued to add free content updates and two paid DLC expansions, including the Animal Farm DLC and the Uranium Project, which adds a nuclear power plant, a Geiger counter system, uranium mine layers, and mutated enemies. That is a meaningful amount of additional content for an indie title four years on from release, and the Steam English-language player base has responded positively over the game's lifetime. For players who enjoy the resource-management loop in games like Sheltered or the base-building rhythm of Fallout Shelter but want a clearer narrative goal to chase, Mr. Prepper scratches that itch without demanding triple-A time commitments. Diego, Scout Team

Mr. Prepper
ActionAdventureCasualIndieRPGSimulation

Mr. Prepper

Mar 18, 2021Rejected GamesPlayWay S.A.
GamerScout Says

Building a rocket under the noses of secret police sounds absurd, but that tension between maintaining a spotless citizen facade and secretly excavating a bunker underneath your house is genuinely compelling. PC is the right platform for it.

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About Mr. Prepper

I went in expecting a lightweight casual sim and came out with a spreadsheet tracking which household items I could strip for copper without triggering the inspector. That surprise is the best thing Mr. Prepper has going for it. You play as a man under government surveillance in a satirical authoritarian suburb called Murricaville, and your one goal is to secretly build an underground bunker complex, craft a rocket, and escape. The twist that makes the resource loop interesting is that your raw material supply starts inside your own home. Dismantle the bookshelf for wood, the cookware for glass, the office chair for plastic. But take too many items and the periodic Agency inspection will flag your suspiciously bare living room. That push and pull between stripping your house for parts and maintaining the illusion of a model citizen is the game's sharpest design decision, and for a good stretch of the early-to-mid game it generates real tension. The crafting progression is structured around a tiered workbench system. You start by cobbling together basic ladders and lighting rigs, then unlock a furnace and steam generator once you reach workbench level two, which opens the path to farms, greenhouses, and eventually vehicle components and rocket parts. Each new room you excavate below the house needs power and light before it can function, so expansion planning has a genuine dependency chain. It is closer to a light management sim than a survival game in the hardcore sense: hunger and the Preparedness meter need watching, but the real bottleneck is always materials and time. Side quests from neighbourhood NPCs like an herbalist and huntress in the forest areas add resource variety and break up the grind, while trading with neighbours offers a slower but steadier alternative to scavenging. The honest caveat is that Mr. Prepper is a PC game at heart. On PC, where a mouse handles item placement and inventory navigation, the controls stay out of the way and the loop holds up. Console ports have drawn consistent criticism for clunky cursor-based controls that turn routine crafting into a friction exercise. If you are reading this on the PC storefront that is mostly a non-issue. The other structural weakness is a midgame lull: once the inspection rules are understood the tension deflates somewhat, and the grind for late-game rocket components can feel mechanical rather than strategic. The combat in outdoor exploration areas is minimal and not particularly interesting. The game also wears its political satire loudly, leaning hard on authoritarian America imagery, which some reviewers found heavy-handed rather than clever. The post-launch support is worth noting. Rejected Games has continued to add free content updates and two paid DLC expansions, including the Animal Farm DLC and the Uranium Project, which adds a nuclear power plant, a Geiger counter system, uranium mine layers, and mutated enemies. That is a meaningful amount of additional content for an indie title four years on from release, and the Steam English-language player base has responded positively over the game's lifetime. For players who enjoy the resource-management loop in games like Sheltered or the base-building rhythm of Fallout Shelter but want a clearer narrative goal to chase, Mr. Prepper scratches that itch without demanding triple-A time commitments. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardscloud-savestier:indieBunker BuildingStealth ManagementResource StrippingInspector MechanicDay-Cycle PlanningNPC TradingSatirical SettingPost-Launch DLC Support

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 11 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows ® 8/7/Vista/XP
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
5 GB available space
Graphics
nVidia GeForce 520M or Intel HD 4000
Processor
3.2 GHz Dual Core Processor

Recommended

OS
Windows 7 64-bit or newer
Memory
6 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
5 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce 970, Radeon RX 580 or equivalent with 4GB of video RAM
Processor
3.2 GHz Quad Core Processor

DLC & Add-ons for Mr. Prepper2

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Game Info

Developer
Rejected Games
Publisher
PlayWay S.A.
Release Date
Mar 18, 2021

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What platforms is Mr. Prepper available on?

Mr. Prepper is available on PC, Mac, Xbox.

When was Mr. Prepper released?

Mr. Prepper was released on 18 March 2021.

Who developed Mr. Prepper?

Mr. Prepper was developed by Rejected Games and published by PlayWay S.A..