Compare Skin Deep prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Blendo Games. Published by Annapurna Interactive. Released on 4/30/2025. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Indie, Simulation. Metacritic score: 79/100.

A 10-hour immersive sim that out-goofs Dishonored and out-systems most AAA titles twice its size. The sim community has been starving; Blendo just fed it.

I went in expecting a lightweight comedy distraction and came out having spent an evening reconstructing an eight-event chain reaction from an in-game log just to understand how an empty soda can contributed to a pirate's death by depressurization. That is exactly the kind of game Skin Deep is: a first-person stealth sandbox set aboard self-contained cargo starships, built by a half-dozen developers at Blendo Games over roughly seven years, and it runs circles around immersive sims that ship with triple the headcount. The setup is this: you are Nina Pasadena, an insurance commando who gets frozen in cargo holds and thawed out when space pirates board. You have no shoes. The ship has cats. The pirates are, functionally, hostiles who will sneeze if you blow pepper at them, slip on banana peels you've placed strategically, get sucked out broken windows, or fall foul of a swordfish drone you've sent ricocheting down a corridor. Every ship is a nonlinear puzzle box with airlocks, vents, trash chutes, and breakable windows as your movement vocabulary. Unlock codes are scrawled on sticky notes near terminals. Blue and yellow keycards are stealable. Alternatively, the vent bypass code you found three rooms ago gets you where you need to go. There are no skill trees and no gear shops - the depth comes entirely from how cleverly you chain the environment together, and the event log the game provides to decode the chaos afterward is a genuine design masterstroke. The systemic depth here is serious. Spending too long in a duct causes Nina to sneeze, which breaks stealth in a way that feels earned rather than arbitrary. Crawling through trash raises her stench meter, letting enemies smell her approach. Shooting near a window risks hull breach and mutual decompression - but in Blendo's cartoon-logic framework, Nina can breathe in open space, meaning she can circle around to an airlock while guards assume she's dead and return to patrol. That single mechanic generated three of my favorite unscripted moments of the year. The weapons - a belt-fed shotgun, a teleportation gun, an autopistol tuned for headshots - all interact with the physics in ways that compound each other. A gas cloud detonated with a lighter. A fuel pipe cracked by a guard body you slammed into it. The event log filling up faster than you can read. Where the game earns fair criticism is structural. Critics noted that a small set of methods can become reliable enough that replaying levels risks producing familiar outcomes, and that the campaign's level count leaves you wanting more ships rather than feeling satisfied. The story - following Nina's off-mission pursuit of the pirate leader Zena, communicated through Blendo's signature mid-gameplay scene cuts and readable emails back at Nina's habitat - is charming but lightly consequential. The retrofuturistic id Tech 4 visuals, deliberately chosen for a timeless look, will read as archaic to players expecting contemporary rendering. The save system has drawn specific complaints across reviews, worth knowing before you invest. For sim veterans, none of that dims what Blendo has achieved here. The Workshop support means the level count will grow, and the studio already released the source code post-launch, which is about as strong an open-modding commitment as a small studio can make. For newcomers to the genre, Skin Deep's cartoon-logic labeling system - objects are tagged in ways that telegraph interactions before you commit - acts as a running tutorial that never pauses the game to lecture you. Players who bounced off Prey or found Deus Ex's opening hours impenetrable will likely find this roughly 10-12 hour campaign a far gentler entry point than its systemic density implies. Diego, Scout Team

Skin Deep
ActionIndieSimulation

Skin Deep

Apr 30, 2025Blendo GamesAnnapurna Interactive
GamerScout Says

A 10-hour immersive sim that out-goofs Dishonored and out-systems most AAA titles twice its size. The sim community has been starving; Blendo just fed it.

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

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 Skin Deep

I went in expecting a lightweight comedy distraction and came out having spent an evening reconstructing an eight-event chain reaction from an in-game log just to understand how an empty soda can contributed to a pirate's death by depressurization. That is exactly the kind of game Skin Deep is: a first-person stealth sandbox set aboard self-contained cargo starships, built by a half-dozen developers at Blendo Games over roughly seven years, and it runs circles around immersive sims that ship with triple the headcount. The setup is this: you are Nina Pasadena, an insurance commando who gets frozen in cargo holds and thawed out when space pirates board. You have no shoes. The ship has cats. The pirates are, functionally, hostiles who will sneeze if you blow pepper at them, slip on banana peels you've placed strategically, get sucked out broken windows, or fall foul of a swordfish drone you've sent ricocheting down a corridor. Every ship is a nonlinear puzzle box with airlocks, vents, trash chutes, and breakable windows as your movement vocabulary. Unlock codes are scrawled on sticky notes near terminals. Blue and yellow keycards are stealable. Alternatively, the vent bypass code you found three rooms ago gets you where you need to go. There are no skill trees and no gear shops - the depth comes entirely from how cleverly you chain the environment together, and the event log the game provides to decode the chaos afterward is a genuine design masterstroke. The systemic depth here is serious. Spending too long in a duct causes Nina to sneeze, which breaks stealth in a way that feels earned rather than arbitrary. Crawling through trash raises her stench meter, letting enemies smell her approach. Shooting near a window risks hull breach and mutual decompression - but in Blendo's cartoon-logic framework, Nina can breathe in open space, meaning she can circle around to an airlock while guards assume she's dead and return to patrol. That single mechanic generated three of my favorite unscripted moments of the year. The weapons - a belt-fed shotgun, a teleportation gun, an autopistol tuned for headshots - all interact with the physics in ways that compound each other. A gas cloud detonated with a lighter. A fuel pipe cracked by a guard body you slammed into it. The event log filling up faster than you can read. Where the game earns fair criticism is structural. Critics noted that a small set of methods can become reliable enough that replaying levels risks producing familiar outcomes, and that the campaign's level count leaves you wanting more ships rather than feeling satisfied. The story - following Nina's off-mission pursuit of the pirate leader Zena, communicated through Blendo's signature mid-gameplay scene cuts and readable emails back at Nina's habitat - is charming but lightly consequential. The retrofuturistic id Tech 4 visuals, deliberately chosen for a timeless look, will read as archaic to players expecting contemporary rendering. The save system has drawn specific complaints across reviews, worth knowing before you invest. For sim veterans, none of that dims what Blendo has achieved here. The Workshop support means the level count will grow, and the studio already released the source code post-launch, which is about as strong an open-modding commitment as a small studio can make. For newcomers to the genre, Skin Deep's cartoon-logic labeling system - objects are tagged in ways that telegraph interactions before you commit - acts as a running tutorial that never pauses the game to lecture you. Players who bounced off Prey or found Deus Ex's opening hours impenetrable will likely find this roughly 10-12 hour campaign a far gentler entry point than its systemic density implies. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supportworkshopcloud-savestier:aaaImmersive SimEmergent GameplayStealth SandboxEvent LogCartoon LogicPhysics InteractionsModding SupportNonlinear LevelsSource Code ReleasedSteam Deck Verified

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 17 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10
Memory
6 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
8 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTS 450, 1GB or AMD Radeon HD 8570, 2GB or Intel UHD Graphics 620
Processor
Intel Core i3-7100 or AMD Ryzen 3 2300X

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 or Windows 11
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
8 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560 Ti, 2GB or AMD Radeon RX 460, 4GB or Intel Arc A310 LP, 4GB
Processor
Intel Core i3-7100 or AMD Ryzen 3 2300X

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Skin Deep.

Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
79

Game Info

Developer
Blendo Games
Publisher
Annapurna Interactive
Release Date
Apr 30, 2025

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

More from Blendo Games

Buy smarter: helpful guides

Frequently asked questions about Skin Deep

Where can I buy Skin Deep cheapest?

Compare Skin Deep 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 Skin Deep available on?

Skin Deep is available on PC.

When was Skin Deep released?

Skin Deep was released on 30 April 2025.

Who developed Skin Deep?

Skin Deep was developed by Blendo Games and published by Annapurna Interactive.

Is Skin Deep worth buying?

Skin Deep holds a Metacritic score of 79/100, making it one of the standout Action titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.