
Rescue Team: Heist of the Century
If your idea of strategy is clicking faster than the disaster can spread, this is the sub-five-dollar time-management fix you already know you want. Just don't expect it to stress-test a spreadsheet.
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

About Rescue Team: Heist of the Century
I'll be straight with you: I came to Rescue Team: Heist of the Century from the wrong angle. My instinct is to look for build orders, resource chains, and late-game scaling. This game has some of those things, wrapped in a very casual shell, and the honest answer is that it delivers exactly what the series has always promised, not a pixel more. It is a top-down, isometric time-management game where your main job is clicking on objectives in a sensible sequence before a timer runs out or resources dry up. The resource loop is genuinely present: you clear debris to unlock paths, assign workers to produce supplies, and juggle multiple concurrent tasks across each of the 65 levels. For players coming from the genre's heavier end, the chain-of-dependencies structure will feel familiar but never taxing. The wrinkle the game pitches as a selling point is its dual-threat scenario design. Levels layer natural disaster cleanup, such as clearing earthquake rubble or managing hurricane wreckage, on top of an art-theft investigation storyline. In practice, this means each stage gives you two types of objectives to resolve, which adds a small planning layer to what would otherwise be pure reflex clicking. Workers can be directed toward clearing disaster zones or producing vital resources, and deciding which thread to pull first is the closest this game gets to genuine strategic tension. It is not deep, but it is not nothing either. The step-by-step level guide is built in, which is a thoughtful inclusion for newcomers, though it does remove nearly all challenge for players who use it liberally. Where the game loses points for a strategy-minded audience is in its ceiling. The AI presents no meaningful opposition. There is no mod ecosystem, no difficulty scaling worth noting beyond the relaxed-versus-timed mode split, and the 65-level count sounds generous until you realize most experienced players will clear the core campaign in a single relaxed weekend. Community threads flag a couple of achievement bugs, including one tied to level one's warning-system repair, so completionists should know that trophy hunting may require patience with a patch or a workaround. The player population is tiny, meaning community-driven help is sparse. That said, this is the thirteenth entry in a long-running series that has found a loyal, low-key audience for a reason. The colorful isometric art style is pleasant, the soundtrack is upbeat without becoming annoying, and the included character biographies and artwork profiles suggest a team that cared about the world they built, even if the mechanical depth does not match the presentation effort. If you have a family member who plays time-management games on a tablet or a browser, this is a clean, polished port of that experience with Steam achievements and cloud saves attached. For that audience, a step-by-step guide, rescue dogs, and 65 bite-sized levels is a comfortable, low-pressure package. For anyone expecting the strategy tag to mean something beyond "click things in order", adjust expectations accordingly before checkout. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7 or later
- Memory
- 2 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 11
- Storage
- 500 MB available space
- Graphics
- GPU with at least 512MB of VRAM
- Processor
- 2 GHz processor
Community Discussion
Be the first to comment on Rescue Team: Heist of the Century.
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- Game Mixer
- Publisher
- Alawar Casual
- Release Date
- Mar 30, 2022







