Compare Powerwash Simulator prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by FuturLab. Published by Square Enix. Released on 7/14/2022. Available on PC, Xbox, Nintendo Switch. Genres: Casual, Indie, Simulation.

A pressure washer sim with suspiciously therapeutic appeal. Spray dirt off driveways, vehicles, and playgrounds until everything gleams. Somehow impossible to put down.

Powerwash Simulator is exactly what the name promises: you point a high-pressure water gun at dirty surfaces and clean them until the grime percentage hits zero. That is the entire game. Developer FuturLab released it in 2022 and it immediately became one of those titles that defies easy categorisation, because on paper it sounds like a tech demo and in practice it eats three hours before you notice the sun has gone down. The core loop is pure incremental satisfaction. Each job gives you a grimy object, a selection of nozzles and spray angles with slightly different efficiency ratings, and a dirt percentage counter ticking down as you work. You unlock better equipment over time, which lets you cover larger surface areas faster, but the game never turns into a grind. The progression is gentle enough that a newcomer can pick up and feel competent within ten minutes. From a systems standpoint it is deliberately shallow, and that is completely intentional. Where it earns its 96 percent Steam approval rating is in the texture of the experience itself. The audio design is doing heavy lifting here: the wet slap of clean tile, the satisfying shift in tone when stubborn dirt finally gives way, the quiet hiss between blasts. Combined with the visual feedback of a surface going from caked brown to bright white, the game creates a low-stakes feedback loop that genuinely reduces tension. There is no fail state, no timer, no resource management. You clean at whatever pace you choose. For players who use games as decompression rather than challenge, this is a serious feature and not a bug. That said, anyone looking for strategic depth or meaningful decision trees will find nothing to grab onto here. Build variety is minimal. The AI is a non-factor. The mod ecosystem on PC exists but is modest. If your purchase criteria includes late-game complexity or replayability driven by mechanical mastery, Powerwash Simulator will run dry well before those criteria are satisfied. The job list is finite, co-op (up to six players online) adds novelty but does not change the fundamentals, and once you have cleaned everything there is limited reason to return unless you genuinely just want to clean things again, which, honestly, some people do. The strongest case for this game is as a secondary title you run in the background of a stressful week, or as something you share with a partner or friend who does not typically play games. It has cleared that bar for hundreds of thousands of players according to its review count. As a strategy sim specialist I would normally interrogate the decision space here and find it wanting, but Powerwash Simulator is not trying to be that kind of game. It is a controlled, competently executed relaxation tool with a very clear scope, and it delivers on that scope without compromise. Diego, Scout Team

Powerwash Simulator
CasualIndieSimulation

Powerwash Simulator

Jul 14, 2022FuturLabSquare Enix
GamerScout Says

A pressure washer sim with suspiciously therapeutic appeal. Spray dirt off driveways, vehicles, and playgrounds until everything gleams. Somehow impossible to put down.

PCXboxNintendo Switch
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Powerwash Simulator

Powerwash Simulator is exactly what the name promises: you point a high-pressure water gun at dirty surfaces and clean them until the grime percentage hits zero. That is the entire game. Developer FuturLab released it in 2022 and it immediately became one of those titles that defies easy categorisation, because on paper it sounds like a tech demo and in practice it eats three hours before you notice the sun has gone down. The core loop is pure incremental satisfaction. Each job gives you a grimy object, a selection of nozzles and spray angles with slightly different efficiency ratings, and a dirt percentage counter ticking down as you work. You unlock better equipment over time, which lets you cover larger surface areas faster, but the game never turns into a grind. The progression is gentle enough that a newcomer can pick up and feel competent within ten minutes. From a systems standpoint it is deliberately shallow, and that is completely intentional. Where it earns its 96 percent Steam approval rating is in the texture of the experience itself. The audio design is doing heavy lifting here: the wet slap of clean tile, the satisfying shift in tone when stubborn dirt finally gives way, the quiet hiss between blasts. Combined with the visual feedback of a surface going from caked brown to bright white, the game creates a low-stakes feedback loop that genuinely reduces tension. There is no fail state, no timer, no resource management. You clean at whatever pace you choose. For players who use games as decompression rather than challenge, this is a serious feature and not a bug. That said, anyone looking for strategic depth or meaningful decision trees will find nothing to grab onto here. Build variety is minimal. The AI is a non-factor. The mod ecosystem on PC exists but is modest. If your purchase criteria includes late-game complexity or replayability driven by mechanical mastery, Powerwash Simulator will run dry well before those criteria are satisfied. The job list is finite, co-op (up to six players online) adds novelty but does not change the fundamentals, and once you have cleaned everything there is limited reason to return unless you genuinely just want to clean things again, which, honestly, some people do. The strongest case for this game is as a secondary title you run in the background of a stressful week, or as something you share with a partner or friend who does not typically play games. It has cleared that bar for hundreds of thousands of players according to its review count. As a strategy sim specialist I would normally interrogate the decision space here and find it wanting, but Powerwash Simulator is not trying to be that kind of game. It is a controlled, competently executed relaxation tool with a very clear scope, and it delivers on that scope without compromise. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamRelaxationCo-op OnlineIncrementalSatisfying ProgressionLow StakesAudio-DrivenFinite Content

System Requirements

System requirements for Powerwash Simulator aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

DLC & Add-ons for Powerwash Simulator3

Expansions, DLC packs and add-on content for this game. Click any item to see store offers.

Reviews & Ratings

Steam
96%(57,916)

Game Info

Developer
FuturLab
Publisher
Square Enix
Release Date
Jul 14, 2022

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

More from FuturLab