Compare Rubber Bandits prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Flashbulb. Published by Flashbulb. Released on 12/2/2021. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action, Casual, Indie.

A chaotic 4-player party brawler where you rob, shove, and scramble for loot across 8 modes. Simple to pick up, surprisingly hard to put down.

Rubber Bandits sits in that crowded corner of the party game shelf next to Gang Beasts and Stick Fight, and it earns its place there by committing hard to one idea: comedic, physics-driven theft. You and up to three others play as rubber-limbed criminals racing to grab the most loot before anyone else does. The controls are loose by design, arms flail, grabs miss at the worst moments, and someone always drops the bag right at the finish line. That slippery, unpredictable quality is the entire joke, and the game is fully aware of it. The eight game modes keep sessions from going stale. Some rounds are pure brawling, others lean into co-op heist vibes where the real enemy is the clock rather than each other, and a few are flat-out races where loot collection is secondary to just surviving. The variety means a group of four can cycle through modes for a couple of hours before anything starts repeating in a way that feels tired. Weapons scatter across each arena, from frying pans to sledgehammers, and landing a clean hit that sends a rival skidding off a ledge never stops being funny. There is genuine depth hiding under the slapstick: learning which weapons have the best knockback, when to hoard versus sprint, and how to use the environment to cut off opponents gives regular players a quiet edge over newcomers. Where the game is honest about its limits is in the solo experience. There is almost no reason to load this up alone. The AI opponents fill a gap in a pinch, but they lack the unpredictability and the trash-talk and the genuine despair of watching a human friend grab your hard-earned bag at the last second. This is fundamentally a couch game ported to a screen, and it plays best when you have warm bodies nearby or reliable friends online. The online matchmaking works, though the community pool is small enough that wait times can stretch depending on the hour. The art style lands well. The rubber character models are expressive without being overly detailed, and the arenas have enough visual personality to feel distinct from one another. The soundtrack keeps the energy up without ever demanding your attention, which is exactly the right call for a game where chaos is always the foreground. Flashbulb clearly understood the assignment: nothing here should distract from the moment a player launches off a trampoline and lands face-first into a pile of gold coins someone else was carrying. At under two hours of runtime to see everything the game offers structurally, longevity lives entirely in your friend group. If you have three people who will actually show up for a session, Rubber Bandits will give you a genuinely good time. If you are buying it hoping to find a community to play with from scratch, results will vary. The 84% positive Steam rating from over seven thousand reviews suggests most buyers knew what they were getting, which says something good about how the game presents itself. Kai, Scout Team

Rubber Bandits
ActionCasualIndie

Rubber Bandits

Dec 2, 2021Flashbulb
GamerScout Says

A chaotic 4-player party brawler where you rob, shove, and scramble for loot across 8 modes. Simple to pick up, surprisingly hard to put down.

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About Rubber Bandits

Rubber Bandits sits in that crowded corner of the party game shelf next to Gang Beasts and Stick Fight, and it earns its place there by committing hard to one idea: comedic, physics-driven theft. You and up to three others play as rubber-limbed criminals racing to grab the most loot before anyone else does. The controls are loose by design, arms flail, grabs miss at the worst moments, and someone always drops the bag right at the finish line. That slippery, unpredictable quality is the entire joke, and the game is fully aware of it. The eight game modes keep sessions from going stale. Some rounds are pure brawling, others lean into co-op heist vibes where the real enemy is the clock rather than each other, and a few are flat-out races where loot collection is secondary to just surviving. The variety means a group of four can cycle through modes for a couple of hours before anything starts repeating in a way that feels tired. Weapons scatter across each arena, from frying pans to sledgehammers, and landing a clean hit that sends a rival skidding off a ledge never stops being funny. There is genuine depth hiding under the slapstick: learning which weapons have the best knockback, when to hoard versus sprint, and how to use the environment to cut off opponents gives regular players a quiet edge over newcomers. Where the game is honest about its limits is in the solo experience. There is almost no reason to load this up alone. The AI opponents fill a gap in a pinch, but they lack the unpredictability and the trash-talk and the genuine despair of watching a human friend grab your hard-earned bag at the last second. This is fundamentally a couch game ported to a screen, and it plays best when you have warm bodies nearby or reliable friends online. The online matchmaking works, though the community pool is small enough that wait times can stretch depending on the hour. The art style lands well. The rubber character models are expressive without being overly detailed, and the arenas have enough visual personality to feel distinct from one another. The soundtrack keeps the energy up without ever demanding your attention, which is exactly the right call for a game where chaos is always the foreground. Flashbulb clearly understood the assignment: nothing here should distract from the moment a player launches off a trampoline and lands face-first into a pile of gold coins someone else was carrying. At under two hours of runtime to see everything the game offers structurally, longevity lives entirely in your friend group. If you have three people who will actually show up for a session, Rubber Bandits will give you a genuinely good time. If you are buying it hoping to find a community to play with from scratch, results will vary. The 84% positive Steam rating from over seven thousand reviews suggests most buyers knew what they were getting, which says something good about how the game presents itself. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

steamParty BrawlerPhysics-Based4-Player LocalCouch Co-opOnline MultiplayerLoot RushPick Up and PlayArena Combat

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
84%(7,089)

Game Info

Developer
Flashbulb
Publisher
Flashbulb
Release Date
Dec 2, 2021

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