Compare Sir Whoopass: Immortal Death prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Atomic Elbow. Published by Atomic Elbow. Released on 8/18/2022. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie, RPG.

A self-aware action-RPG that roasts the genre with puns, 4th-wall breaks, and dad jokes baked into every quest. Think parody-first, combat-second.

Sir Whoopass: Immortal Death is a comedic action-RPG from indie developer Atomic Elbow, built on the premise that the genre takes itself far too seriously. The whole thing is structured around a quest to track down the Legendary Villain-Beating Artifact, which is exactly as ridiculous as it sounds and clearly intended to be. If your tolerance for dad jokes and self-referential humor runs high, this is a game that leans into that constantly, without apology. It plays like someone made a bingo card of classic RPG tropes and then systematically made fun of every single one. The combat sits in action-RPG territory, snappy enough to keep things moving, though it is clearly not the star of the show here. The real draw is the writing, which pokes at overly serious RPG conventions with enough wit to land most of its jokes without feeling like a one-note gag. 4th-wall breaks show up regularly, and the game occasionally swings into arcade minigame territory, including something explicitly described as flappy-bird-style. Whether those detours feel fun or disruptive will depend entirely on your patience for genre-mixing humor. They are not hidden or rare; they are core to the experience. For players who have ever rolled their eyes at a brooding fantasy protagonist or a 45-minute dialogue tree that takes itself dead seriously, there is genuine satisfaction in watching Sir Whoopass mock those conventions. The Steam review pool of nearly 1,900 ratings sits at 82% positive, which for a niche comedic indie is a meaningful signal that the jokes land more often than they miss. This is not a deep-lore worldbuilding experience and does not pretend to be. The worldbuilding exists to be lampooned rather than inhabited. Where the game earns legitimate criticism is in the corners where parody becomes a structural excuse. Comedic framing can sometimes mask thin quest design, and players who hit the end of the joke cycle may find the underlying gameplay loop a little light. It is a relatively compact experience rather than something with build variety that evolves past hour 40. If you come in expecting the mechanical depth of something in the same genre tags, you will be looking in the wrong place. Come for the jokes, stay for the jokes, accept that the jokes are the product. Sir Whoopass works best as a palate cleanser between heavier RPGs, or as an entry point for players who find the genre's standard earnestness a bit exhausting. Atomic Elbow built something with a clear comedic identity and enough polish to execute on it consistently. Recommended with the caveat that you have to actually enjoy this specific flavor of self-aware humor, because there is no straight version of this game hiding underneath. Monika, Scout Team

Sir Whoopass: Immortal Death
ActionAdventureIndieRPG

Sir Whoopass: Immortal Death

Aug 18, 2022Atomic Elbow
GamerScout Says

A self-aware action-RPG that roasts the genre with puns, 4th-wall breaks, and dad jokes baked into every quest. Think parody-first, combat-second.

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About Sir Whoopass: Immortal Death

Sir Whoopass: Immortal Death is a comedic action-RPG from indie developer Atomic Elbow, built on the premise that the genre takes itself far too seriously. The whole thing is structured around a quest to track down the Legendary Villain-Beating Artifact, which is exactly as ridiculous as it sounds and clearly intended to be. If your tolerance for dad jokes and self-referential humor runs high, this is a game that leans into that constantly, without apology. It plays like someone made a bingo card of classic RPG tropes and then systematically made fun of every single one. The combat sits in action-RPG territory, snappy enough to keep things moving, though it is clearly not the star of the show here. The real draw is the writing, which pokes at overly serious RPG conventions with enough wit to land most of its jokes without feeling like a one-note gag. 4th-wall breaks show up regularly, and the game occasionally swings into arcade minigame territory, including something explicitly described as flappy-bird-style. Whether those detours feel fun or disruptive will depend entirely on your patience for genre-mixing humor. They are not hidden or rare; they are core to the experience. For players who have ever rolled their eyes at a brooding fantasy protagonist or a 45-minute dialogue tree that takes itself dead seriously, there is genuine satisfaction in watching Sir Whoopass mock those conventions. The Steam review pool of nearly 1,900 ratings sits at 82% positive, which for a niche comedic indie is a meaningful signal that the jokes land more often than they miss. This is not a deep-lore worldbuilding experience and does not pretend to be. The worldbuilding exists to be lampooned rather than inhabited. Where the game earns legitimate criticism is in the corners where parody becomes a structural excuse. Comedic framing can sometimes mask thin quest design, and players who hit the end of the joke cycle may find the underlying gameplay loop a little light. It is a relatively compact experience rather than something with build variety that evolves past hour 40. If you come in expecting the mechanical depth of something in the same genre tags, you will be looking in the wrong place. Come for the jokes, stay for the jokes, accept that the jokes are the product. Sir Whoopass works best as a palate cleanser between heavier RPGs, or as an entry point for players who find the genre's standard earnestness a bit exhausting. Atomic Elbow built something with a clear comedic identity and enough polish to execute on it consistently. Recommended with the caveat that you have to actually enjoy this specific flavor of self-aware humor, because there is no straight version of this game hiding underneath. Monika, Scout Team

Tags

steamParody RPG4th-Wall BreakingComedy WritingArcade MinigamesGenre SatireSingle-Player FocusedShort Playthrough

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
82%(1,868)

Game Info

Developer
Atomic Elbow
Publisher
Atomic Elbow
Release Date
Aug 18, 2022

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