Compare Panty Party prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Animu Game. Published by Animu Game. Released on 1/24/2017. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Casual, Indie, Simulation.

Panty Party is a fast-paced aerial brawler where you play as sentient underwear fighting other sentient underwear. Yes, really. It commits fully to the bit.

Let me be straight with you: this is not a grand strategy game, and I am not the expected reviewer here. But the Scout Team covers everything, so here I am with my spreadsheets, staring at a game about flying panties punching each other over city streets. Panty Party is a casual 3D aerial combat game developed and published by Animu Game. You control a pair of sentient underwear, launch yourself through urban environments, and beat up enemy panties. That is the entire premise, and the game knows it. From a mechanical standpoint, the core loop is simple: fly around a level, locate hostile panties, and engage in brawl-style combat mid-air. The movement has a floaty, arcade quality to it that fits the absurdist theme. There is no deep build system, no branching tech tree, and no late-game complexity for me to sink a color-coded spreadsheet into. What you get is a pick-up-and-play action experience built around short sessions and low barrier to entry. The controls are accessible enough that even players who avoid action games can get a few rounds in without a steep learning curve. The variety in playable panty types functions loosely like a roster system, with different characters offering slightly different combat feels. It is not deep character differentiation by any competitive standard, but it adds enough surface variety to keep the game from feeling completely one-note across its runtime. Level design across the city environments is functional rather than inspired, giving you open vertical space to work with. The AI opponents are not going to challenge anyone who plays action games regularly, which tracks for a casual title priced accordingly. What actually explains the 92% positive rating on Steam is honest self-awareness. Panty Party does not pretend to be something it is not. It delivers a dumb, cheerful, low-stakes brawler that runs well, controls adequately, and has a sense of humor about its own existence. Players who walked in expecting exactly that came out happy. There is no false advertising, no bloated runtime, and no frustrating difficulty spikes hiding behind the goofiness. For what it is, it is competently made. The mod ecosystem is essentially nonexistent, and there is no multiplayer component to sustain long-term engagement. Who is this actually for? Casual players, fans of absurdist Japanese indie games, and anyone who genuinely needs 30 minutes of no-stakes content after a brutal work week. It is not for players chasing mechanical depth, replay value, or competitive challenge. Treat it like what it is: a short, weird, self-contained experience that respects your time precisely because it does not try to consume too much of it. No tutorial complaints here either since the game is simple enough that you will figure it out in two minutes flat. Diego, Scout Team

Panty Party
ActionAdventureCasualIndieSimulation

Panty Party

Jan 24, 2017Animu Game
GamerScout Says

Panty Party is a fast-paced aerial brawler where you play as sentient underwear fighting other sentient underwear. Yes, really. It commits fully to the bit.

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Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Panty Party

Let me be straight with you: this is not a grand strategy game, and I am not the expected reviewer here. But the Scout Team covers everything, so here I am with my spreadsheets, staring at a game about flying panties punching each other over city streets. Panty Party is a casual 3D aerial combat game developed and published by Animu Game. You control a pair of sentient underwear, launch yourself through urban environments, and beat up enemy panties. That is the entire premise, and the game knows it. From a mechanical standpoint, the core loop is simple: fly around a level, locate hostile panties, and engage in brawl-style combat mid-air. The movement has a floaty, arcade quality to it that fits the absurdist theme. There is no deep build system, no branching tech tree, and no late-game complexity for me to sink a color-coded spreadsheet into. What you get is a pick-up-and-play action experience built around short sessions and low barrier to entry. The controls are accessible enough that even players who avoid action games can get a few rounds in without a steep learning curve. The variety in playable panty types functions loosely like a roster system, with different characters offering slightly different combat feels. It is not deep character differentiation by any competitive standard, but it adds enough surface variety to keep the game from feeling completely one-note across its runtime. Level design across the city environments is functional rather than inspired, giving you open vertical space to work with. The AI opponents are not going to challenge anyone who plays action games regularly, which tracks for a casual title priced accordingly. What actually explains the 92% positive rating on Steam is honest self-awareness. Panty Party does not pretend to be something it is not. It delivers a dumb, cheerful, low-stakes brawler that runs well, controls adequately, and has a sense of humor about its own existence. Players who walked in expecting exactly that came out happy. There is no false advertising, no bloated runtime, and no frustrating difficulty spikes hiding behind the goofiness. For what it is, it is competently made. The mod ecosystem is essentially nonexistent, and there is no multiplayer component to sustain long-term engagement. Who is this actually for? Casual players, fans of absurdist Japanese indie games, and anyone who genuinely needs 30 minutes of no-stakes content after a brutal work week. It is not for players chasing mechanical depth, replay value, or competitive challenge. Treat it like what it is: a short, weird, self-contained experience that respects your time precisely because it does not try to consume too much of it. No tutorial complaints here either since the game is simple enough that you will figure it out in two minutes flat. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamAerial CombatCasual BrawlerAbsurdist HumorShort PlaytimeJapanese IndiePick-Up-and-Play3D Fighter

System Requirements

System requirements for Panty Party aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Steam
92%(1,148)

Game Info

Developer
Animu Game
Publisher
Animu Game
Release Date
Jan 24, 2017

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