Party Club is free-to-play — free to download and play, with optional paid editions and DLC compared on this page. Developed by Lucid11 Interactive. Published by GameDev.ist. Released on 3/17/2025. Available on PC, Mac. Genres: Action, Casual, Indie, Simulation, Strategy, Free To Play.

Overcooked with a bouncer's clipboard: the customer-seating puzzle layer is what separates Party Club from every other co-op chaos game, but clunky solo controls mean you really need friends to get the most out of it.

My first instinct when I saw Party Club's Steam page was to file it under 'Overcooked clone, skip.' That instinct was wrong, but only partially. What Lucid11 Interactive has layered on top of the familiar co-op restaurant rush formula is a customer relationship system that actually introduces a decision-making dimension most games in this genre ignore. Seating incompatible animal types next to each other triggers friction fast - a panda next to a tiger is not a decoration choice, it's a cascade of problems you'll be scrambling to contain while simultaneously mixing drinks, cleaning tables, and repairing broken fixtures. That tension, the constant triage of priorities, is where the game earns its own identity rather than riding on Overcooked's coattails. The structure runs across ten-day shifts, each opening with a setup phase where you rearrange tables, juice machines, and toilets before the gong rings and chaos begins. This pre-shift planning window is the closest the game gets to genuine strategy, and players with a build-order mindset will appreciate that venue layout has real downstream consequences. Positioning your drink station poorly in early rounds will punish you in later ones when customer volume picks up. The progression arc also sends you across different regional venues, with master mixologists gating further advancement - a light RPG hook that gives the session-by-session loop some forward momentum beyond just survival. The co-op side is where the game is most convincing. Online infrastructure holds up well, with regional servers keeping latency manageable, and local couch co-op works smoothly for up to four players. The character customization - outfits, headgear, held items - is cosmetic but adds to the session ritual of picking your look before diving in. The Mini Mayhem DLC extends things with competitive challenge modes including a chaotic soccer variant and card-based rival restaurant modes, which read more as party minigame fodder than serious depth, but they do give repeat groups something fresh to argue about. The rougher edges are real and worth knowing before you commit. Solo play is noticeably weaker: the keyboard control scheme was flagged as frustrating even in the demo period, and the single-player pacing never fills the gap left by absent teammates. Launch also brought a memory leak and controller input bugs, though the patch history shows Lucid11 has been responsive about fixes - controller mapping issues, object interaction failures, and collider problems all received post-launch patches. There is no in-game voice chat, which matters more than you'd think in a game that runs entirely on real-time communication. Community workaround is Discord, which works fine but adds friction for casual groups. The Steam review pool sits in mixed territory, with technical gripes and the learning curve for customer type management accounting for most of the negatives. For a free-to-play title aimed at groups, the value proposition is straightforward: if you have two to four friends who want a co-op experience with slightly more strategic texture than a straight cooking game, Party Club delivers that at zero entry cost. Go in solo expecting a full experience and you will be disappointed. Go in with a full squad, a working controller, and some patience for the control feel, and there are enough mechanical hooks here to keep a regular group busy across multiple sessions. Diego, Scout Team

Party Club
ActionCasualIndieSimulationStrategyFree To Play

Party Club

Mar 17, 2025Lucid11 InteractiveGameDev.ist
GamerScout Says

Overcooked with a bouncer's clipboard: the customer-seating puzzle layer is what separates Party Club from every other co-op chaos game, but clunky solo controls mean you really need friends to get the most out of it.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Party Club

My first instinct when I saw Party Club's Steam page was to file it under 'Overcooked clone, skip.' That instinct was wrong, but only partially. What Lucid11 Interactive has layered on top of the familiar co-op restaurant rush formula is a customer relationship system that actually introduces a decision-making dimension most games in this genre ignore. Seating incompatible animal types next to each other triggers friction fast - a panda next to a tiger is not a decoration choice, it's a cascade of problems you'll be scrambling to contain while simultaneously mixing drinks, cleaning tables, and repairing broken fixtures. That tension, the constant triage of priorities, is where the game earns its own identity rather than riding on Overcooked's coattails. The structure runs across ten-day shifts, each opening with a setup phase where you rearrange tables, juice machines, and toilets before the gong rings and chaos begins. This pre-shift planning window is the closest the game gets to genuine strategy, and players with a build-order mindset will appreciate that venue layout has real downstream consequences. Positioning your drink station poorly in early rounds will punish you in later ones when customer volume picks up. The progression arc also sends you across different regional venues, with master mixologists gating further advancement - a light RPG hook that gives the session-by-session loop some forward momentum beyond just survival. The co-op side is where the game is most convincing. Online infrastructure holds up well, with regional servers keeping latency manageable, and local couch co-op works smoothly for up to four players. The character customization - outfits, headgear, held items - is cosmetic but adds to the session ritual of picking your look before diving in. The Mini Mayhem DLC extends things with competitive challenge modes including a chaotic soccer variant and card-based rival restaurant modes, which read more as party minigame fodder than serious depth, but they do give repeat groups something fresh to argue about. The rougher edges are real and worth knowing before you commit. Solo play is noticeably weaker: the keyboard control scheme was flagged as frustrating even in the demo period, and the single-player pacing never fills the gap left by absent teammates. Launch also brought a memory leak and controller input bugs, though the patch history shows Lucid11 has been responsive about fixes - controller mapping issues, object interaction failures, and collider problems all received post-launch patches. There is no in-game voice chat, which matters more than you'd think in a game that runs entirely on real-time communication. Community workaround is Discord, which works fine but adds friction for casual groups. The Steam review pool sits in mixed territory, with technical gripes and the learning curve for customer type management accounting for most of the negatives. For a free-to-play title aimed at groups, the value proposition is straightforward: if you have two to four friends who want a co-op experience with slightly more strategic texture than a straight cooking game, Party Club delivers that at zero entry cost. Go in solo expecting a full experience and you will be disappointed. Go in with a full squad, a working controller, and some patience for the control feel, and there are enough mechanical hooks here to keep a regular group busy across multiple sessions. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayercooponline-cooplocal-coopachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Venue ManagementCustomer Type SystemPre-Shift Planning4-Player Co-opCouch Co-opCompetitive MinigamesAnimal CharactersShift-Based ProgressionController Recommended

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 5 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
6 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GT 730 / AMD Radeon R7 240 / Intel HD Graphics 4400 or above
Processor
Intel Core i3 or equivalent
Additional Notes
Gamepads Recommended

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
6 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 750 Ti / AMD Radeon RX 460 / Intel Iris Xe Graphics or above
Processor
Intel Core i5 or equivalent
Additional Notes
Gamepads Recommended

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
Lucid11 Interactive
Publisher
GameDev.ist
Release Date
Mar 17, 2025

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Price History

2026-06-100.36(lowest)

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Frequently asked questions about Party Club

How much does Party Club cost?

Party Club is free-to-play — it costs nothing to download and play on PC, Mac. Any optional editions, DLC or in-game add-ons are listed in the price table on this page.

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What platforms is Party Club available on?

Party Club is available on PC, Mac.

When was Party Club released?

Party Club was released on 17 March 2025.

Who developed Party Club?

Party Club was developed by Lucid11 Interactive and published by GameDev.ist.