Compare Robotex prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by YFYX GAMES. Published by My Way Games. Released on 11/19/2014. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Action, Adventure, Casual, Indie.

Worth skipping unless your Steam trading card grind is absolutely desperate. Robotex is a mostly-negative-rated mobile port that never learned what a PC feels like under the hands.

I went into Robotex genuinely hoping for one of those scrappy little underdogs - a one-person passion project with alien vistas and a quiet moral twist about colonialism baked into its bones. The premise hints at it: you are the villain, the robot clearing a living world so humanity can move in. That ironic frame could have been something. Instead, what you get is an automatic side-scroller that started its life as a mobile app and was shipped to Steam with essentially nothing changed for the transition. The control scheme is brutally stripped down. Your robot moves forward on its own at a constant pace - you steer only up and down using a jet mechanic, and you fire weapons with a single button you can more or less hold down and forget. There are ten guns and over twenty enemy types listed on the store page, but the variety on offer rarely translates into meaningful tactical choice when your input is basically "float here, shoot now." The floatiness of the vertical movement is the headline problem. Levels throw obstacles and collapsing terrain at you that demand pixel-precise positioning, but the controls respond like you are nudging a balloon through a corridor. Deaths arrive frequently and without much warning - the kind that feel punitive rather than instructive, sending you back through sections you had already survived through luck rather than skill. The audio situation is thin to the point of atmosphere-free. Missile fire and explosion sounds repeat on a loop that wears on you fast, and outside the main menu there is essentially no music to carry you through levels. For a game that asks you to retry sections multiple times, the silence where a soundscape should be feels like a genuine absence rather than an artistic choice. I will defend a slow opening and a sparse soundtrack when the craft is deliberate. Here, it reads as unfinished. Visually, the backgrounds and alien creature designs are genuinely colorful and show some imagination - the art is probably the one place where real effort landed. It is just a shame the rest of the experience cannot match it. The practical reality is that Robotex sits at roughly 30 percent positive on Steam across hundreds of reviews, a number that has held steady since release with no meaningful updates to shift community sentiment. The median playtime hovers around two hours, which is probably about as long as most players gave it before moving on. If you are hunting Steam trading cards from a bundle, that context is the clearest reason this title exists in your library at all. As a standalone recommendation for anyone who loves side-scrollers, auto-runners, or sci-fi action platformers - titles that actually nail the genre exist in abundance, and this one does not earn a place in that conversation. Kai, Scout Team

Robotex
ActionAdventureCasualIndie

Robotex

Nov 19, 2014YFYX GAMESMy Way Games
GamerScout Says

Worth skipping unless your Steam trading card grind is absolutely desperate. Robotex is a mostly-negative-rated mobile port that never learned what a PC feels like under the hands.

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About Robotex

I went into Robotex genuinely hoping for one of those scrappy little underdogs - a one-person passion project with alien vistas and a quiet moral twist about colonialism baked into its bones. The premise hints at it: you are the villain, the robot clearing a living world so humanity can move in. That ironic frame could have been something. Instead, what you get is an automatic side-scroller that started its life as a mobile app and was shipped to Steam with essentially nothing changed for the transition. The control scheme is brutally stripped down. Your robot moves forward on its own at a constant pace - you steer only up and down using a jet mechanic, and you fire weapons with a single button you can more or less hold down and forget. There are ten guns and over twenty enemy types listed on the store page, but the variety on offer rarely translates into meaningful tactical choice when your input is basically "float here, shoot now." The floatiness of the vertical movement is the headline problem. Levels throw obstacles and collapsing terrain at you that demand pixel-precise positioning, but the controls respond like you are nudging a balloon through a corridor. Deaths arrive frequently and without much warning - the kind that feel punitive rather than instructive, sending you back through sections you had already survived through luck rather than skill. The audio situation is thin to the point of atmosphere-free. Missile fire and explosion sounds repeat on a loop that wears on you fast, and outside the main menu there is essentially no music to carry you through levels. For a game that asks you to retry sections multiple times, the silence where a soundscape should be feels like a genuine absence rather than an artistic choice. I will defend a slow opening and a sparse soundtrack when the craft is deliberate. Here, it reads as unfinished. Visually, the backgrounds and alien creature designs are genuinely colorful and show some imagination - the art is probably the one place where real effort landed. It is just a shame the rest of the experience cannot match it. The practical reality is that Robotex sits at roughly 30 percent positive on Steam across hundreds of reviews, a number that has held steady since release with no meaningful updates to shift community sentiment. The median playtime hovers around two hours, which is probably about as long as most players gave it before moving on. If you are hunting Steam trading cards from a bundle, that context is the clearest reason this title exists in your library at all. As a standalone recommendation for anyone who loves side-scrollers, auto-runners, or sci-fi action platformers - titles that actually nail the genre exist in abundance, and this one does not earn a place in that conversation. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertrading-cardstier:sub-5Mobile PortAuto-RunnerSci-Fi SettingObstacle DodgeMinimal ControlsMoral FramingColorful VisualsLow Playtime

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Unsupported

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7/8/8.1
Memory
2000 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 10
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GT 240 (or better)
Processor
2.0 GHz

Recommended

OS
Windows 7/8/8.1
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 10
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GT 240 (or better)
Processor
3.0 GHz

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
YFYX GAMES
Publisher
My Way Games
Release Date
Nov 19, 2014

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Frequently asked questions about Robotex

Where can I buy Robotex cheapest?

Compare Robotex prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Robotex available on?

Robotex is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was Robotex released?

Robotex was released on 19 November 2014.

Who developed Robotex?

Robotex was developed by YFYX GAMES and published by My Way Games.