Compare Roll'd prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by MGP Studios. Published by Forever Entertainment S. A.. Released on 4/14/2016. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Action, Casual, Indie, Racing.

Flipping the endless runner formula on its head: you steer the track, not the runner. Genuinely clever party trick, razor-thin depth.

I'll be straight with you: Roll'd grabbed my attention the moment I understood its core gimmick, and then spent the next hour quietly testing whether that gimmick was actually enough to carry a full game. The answer is complicated. The concept is disarmingly simple - you tilt and balance a track while a character rolls down it on autopilot. Your thumbs (or your mouse) handle the track; the runner handles nothing. It sounds like the kind of idea someone sketches on a napkin during a game jam, and honestly that energy is exactly what Roll'd gives off, for better and worse. The mechanical hook lands cleanly. Keeping the track level is harder than you expect in the early seconds and legitimately nerve-wracking once the speed ramps up through the four difficulty tiers. There are five graphical themes - each one styled after a different retro computing era, from CGA pixel grids through NES and SNES 8-16bit aesthetics up to Amiga-era vibes - and they all layer on dynamic weather and modern lighting effects that make the nostalgia feel fresh rather than dusty. Unlocking the 25 runners and additional themes through score milestones gives solo players a clear progression loop, even if none of the unlocks change how the underlying game feels. The online leaderboards add a drip of competitive pressure if you care about global rankings, which casual players probably won't. Multiplayer is where Roll'd earns most of its goodwill as a party game. Local co-op and online modes support two to four players, and cramming four people around a screen to watch each other's tracks collapse is genuinely funny for a session or two. The "is it fun for four friends" test: yes, briefly and repeatably, especially if someone in the group is bad at it and provides entertainment value. That said, Roll'd does not have the mechanical depth to anchor a full Saturday night tournament. Sessions are short by design, the game has no team modes or power-ups, and once the initial wow-factor of the inverted control scheme fades, you're left with a score-chasing loop that goes thin faster than you'd hope. Steam players landed it at Mostly Positive across 150 reviews, which feels about right - nobody hates it, but nobody is clocking 50 hours either. For hardware setup: this is a mouse-and-keyboard or gamepad game all the way. Ignore your wheel and pedals entirely; the tilting mechanic maps cleanly to an analog stick or mouse and there is no meaningful reason to reach for anything heavier. Controller support is confirmed and feels natural. Cross-platform play between PC, Mac, and Linux is a small but welcome practical touch for mixed-OS friend groups. If you are shopping for a lean, low-commitment arcade game with a genuinely original control idea and you have a couch full of friends to inflict it on, Roll'd fills that niche without asking much of your wallet or your evening. Go in expecting a clever curio rather than a deep arcade game and you will come out satisfied. Go in expecting legs and you will feel the floor pretty fast. Riley, Scout Team

Roll'd
ActionCasualIndieRacing

Roll'd

Apr 14, 2016MGP StudiosForever Entertainment S. A.
GamerScout Says

Flipping the endless runner formula on its head: you steer the track, not the runner. Genuinely clever party trick, razor-thin depth.

PCMacLinux
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $0.34

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 Roll'd

I'll be straight with you: Roll'd grabbed my attention the moment I understood its core gimmick, and then spent the next hour quietly testing whether that gimmick was actually enough to carry a full game. The answer is complicated. The concept is disarmingly simple - you tilt and balance a track while a character rolls down it on autopilot. Your thumbs (or your mouse) handle the track; the runner handles nothing. It sounds like the kind of idea someone sketches on a napkin during a game jam, and honestly that energy is exactly what Roll'd gives off, for better and worse. The mechanical hook lands cleanly. Keeping the track level is harder than you expect in the early seconds and legitimately nerve-wracking once the speed ramps up through the four difficulty tiers. There are five graphical themes - each one styled after a different retro computing era, from CGA pixel grids through NES and SNES 8-16bit aesthetics up to Amiga-era vibes - and they all layer on dynamic weather and modern lighting effects that make the nostalgia feel fresh rather than dusty. Unlocking the 25 runners and additional themes through score milestones gives solo players a clear progression loop, even if none of the unlocks change how the underlying game feels. The online leaderboards add a drip of competitive pressure if you care about global rankings, which casual players probably won't. Multiplayer is where Roll'd earns most of its goodwill as a party game. Local co-op and online modes support two to four players, and cramming four people around a screen to watch each other's tracks collapse is genuinely funny for a session or two. The "is it fun for four friends" test: yes, briefly and repeatably, especially if someone in the group is bad at it and provides entertainment value. That said, Roll'd does not have the mechanical depth to anchor a full Saturday night tournament. Sessions are short by design, the game has no team modes or power-ups, and once the initial wow-factor of the inverted control scheme fades, you're left with a score-chasing loop that goes thin faster than you'd hope. Steam players landed it at Mostly Positive across 150 reviews, which feels about right - nobody hates it, but nobody is clocking 50 hours either. For hardware setup: this is a mouse-and-keyboard or gamepad game all the way. Ignore your wheel and pedals entirely; the tilting mechanic maps cleanly to an analog stick or mouse and there is no meaningful reason to reach for anything heavier. Controller support is confirmed and feels natural. Cross-platform play between PC, Mac, and Linux is a small but welcome practical touch for mixed-OS friend groups. If you are shopping for a lean, low-commitment arcade game with a genuinely original control idea and you have a couch full of friends to inflict it on, Roll'd fills that niche without asking much of your wallet or your evening. Go in expecting a clever curio rather than a deep arcade game and you will come out satisfied. Go in expecting legs and you will feel the floor pretty fast. Riley, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerlocal-coopcross-platformachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Endless RunnerTrack ControlParty GameScore AttackRetro Themes2-4 PlayerQuick SessionCouch Co-op

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7
Memory
1 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
nVidia 320M or higher, or Radeon 7000 or higher, or Intel HD 3000 or higher
Processor
Dual core from Intel or AMD at 2.0 GHz

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Roll'd.

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
MGP Studios
Publisher
Forever Entertainment S. A.
Release Date
Apr 14, 2016

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

Price History

2026-06-100.34(lowest)

More from MGP Studios

Buy smarter: helpful guides

Looking for more? See games like Roll'd

Frequently asked questions about Roll'd

How much does Roll'd cost?

Roll'd pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock key and store offers across 50+ verified shops, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

Where can I buy Roll'd cheapest?

Compare Roll'd 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 Roll'd available on?

Roll'd is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was Roll'd released?

Roll'd was released on 14 April 2016.

Who developed Roll'd?

Roll'd was developed by MGP Studios and published by Forever Entertainment S. A..