Compare Snafu prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Stanislaw Truchowski. Published by TurnVex. Released on 3/8/2023. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie.

A one-person horror experiment that wraps a creepypasta nightmare inside a blocky medieval business sim - and somehow the cozy loop makes the dread hit harder when it finally arrives.

I went in expecting a cheap jump-scare wrapper dressed up in low-poly clothing. What I got instead was one of the more quietly unsettling hours I have spent with a solo-developed horror game in a long while. Snafu is a first-person psychological horror title built around a deliberately odd premise: you are playing a Minecraft-adjacent medieval business sim, buying goods, levelling your rank, chatting with NPCs, and slowly accumulating enough coin to reach the castle - except a viral entity named Snafu has already wormed its way into the game files, and it is not content to wait. The structure is the trick. You actually play the inner game on its own terms: make money, raise your rank, purchase property (some of which may or may not be haunted), collect over a hundred unlockable items, and work through small side-quests. The loop is genuinely calm at first - birds call during the day, crickets fill the nights, and the blocky pixel-and-low-poly aesthetic sits somewhere between Animal Crossing and an early Minecraft mod. That deliberate gentleness is not padding; it is the mechanism. By the time textures start morphing and NPCs begin behaving in ways their cheerful little models were never designed for, you are already comfortable enough to feel properly robbed of that comfort. Three separate endings give a reason to poke at your choices, and the puzzle-locked progression toward the castle does produce some genuine head-scratching moments that the Steam community happily argues over. The audio design deserves special mention because it is doing most of the heavy lifting. There is no sweeping orchestral score here - just ambient naturalism that goes quietly wrong. The shift from birdsong to something staticky and wrong when Snafu draws near is the kind of low-budget, high-craft decision that a solo developer with good instincts makes because they have no other option. It works better than most AAA horror stings. The game carries a content warning for disturbing audio and flashing lights, and that warning is not performative. Where Snafu is less convincing is in the mid-section pacing. The levelling grind can feel slightly elongated before the horror fully escalates, and players who are not charmed by the incremental business loop may find the calm phase overstays its welcome by about fifteen minutes. The estimated eighty-minute runtime is realistic for a direct run; completionists chasing all achievements and the Legendary Rank will land closer to two and a half hours. For a game this compact, that is a reasonable upper bound. Save functionality and controller support are present, which the developer notes as meaningful additions compared to earlier TurnVex releases. Snafu is the kind of game that deserves more eyes than it has found. It sits in a specific lane - creepypasta sensibility, incremental horror, game-within-a-game meta framing - and it executes that lane with more craft than its obscure corner of Steam suggests. If you have ever felt genuinely unsettled by the idea that something sentient has gotten inside your software, this game will know exactly which nerve to press. Kai, Scout Team

Snafu
ActionAdventureIndie

Snafu

Mar 8, 2023Stanislaw TruchowskiTurnVex
GamerScout Says

A one-person horror experiment that wraps a creepypasta nightmare inside a blocky medieval business sim - and somehow the cozy loop makes the dread hit harder when it finally arrives.

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 Snafu

I went in expecting a cheap jump-scare wrapper dressed up in low-poly clothing. What I got instead was one of the more quietly unsettling hours I have spent with a solo-developed horror game in a long while. Snafu is a first-person psychological horror title built around a deliberately odd premise: you are playing a Minecraft-adjacent medieval business sim, buying goods, levelling your rank, chatting with NPCs, and slowly accumulating enough coin to reach the castle - except a viral entity named Snafu has already wormed its way into the game files, and it is not content to wait. The structure is the trick. You actually play the inner game on its own terms: make money, raise your rank, purchase property (some of which may or may not be haunted), collect over a hundred unlockable items, and work through small side-quests. The loop is genuinely calm at first - birds call during the day, crickets fill the nights, and the blocky pixel-and-low-poly aesthetic sits somewhere between Animal Crossing and an early Minecraft mod. That deliberate gentleness is not padding; it is the mechanism. By the time textures start morphing and NPCs begin behaving in ways their cheerful little models were never designed for, you are already comfortable enough to feel properly robbed of that comfort. Three separate endings give a reason to poke at your choices, and the puzzle-locked progression toward the castle does produce some genuine head-scratching moments that the Steam community happily argues over. The audio design deserves special mention because it is doing most of the heavy lifting. There is no sweeping orchestral score here - just ambient naturalism that goes quietly wrong. The shift from birdsong to something staticky and wrong when Snafu draws near is the kind of low-budget, high-craft decision that a solo developer with good instincts makes because they have no other option. It works better than most AAA horror stings. The game carries a content warning for disturbing audio and flashing lights, and that warning is not performative. Where Snafu is less convincing is in the mid-section pacing. The levelling grind can feel slightly elongated before the horror fully escalates, and players who are not charmed by the incremental business loop may find the calm phase overstays its welcome by about fifteen minutes. The estimated eighty-minute runtime is realistic for a direct run; completionists chasing all achievements and the Legendary Rank will land closer to two and a half hours. For a game this compact, that is a reasonable upper bound. Save functionality and controller support are present, which the developer notes as meaningful additions compared to earlier TurnVex releases. Snafu is the kind of game that deserves more eyes than it has found. It sits in a specific lane - creepypasta sensibility, incremental horror, game-within-a-game meta framing - and it executes that lane with more craft than its obscure corner of Steam suggests. If you have ever felt genuinely unsettled by the idea that something sentient has gotten inside your software, this game will know exactly which nerve to press. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttier:sub-5Game-Within-a-GameIncremental HorrorCreepypasta AestheticAmbient SoundscapeMultiple EndingsLow-Poly ArtStalker EntityShort-Form HorrorSave System

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Playable

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 64-bit
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
GTX 960 or slightly lower
Processor
i5 + anything post 2017 should suffice
Sound Card
DirectX 11 or higher compatible sound card
Additional Notes
Any reasonable gaming computer with parts made between 2017 - 2023+ should meet the minimum and optimal requirements of this game.

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 64-bit
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
4 GB available space
Graphics
GTX 970 or slightly lower
Processor
i5 + anything post 2017 should suffice
Sound Card
DirectX 11 or higher compatible sound card
Additional Notes
Any reasonable gaming computer with parts made between 2017 - 2023+ should meet the minimum and optimal requirements of this game.

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Snafu.

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Stanislaw Truchowski
Publisher
TurnVex
Release Date
Mar 8, 2023

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

More from Stanislaw Truchowski

Frequently asked questions about Snafu

Where can I buy Snafu cheapest?

Compare Snafu 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 Snafu available on?

Snafu is available on PC.

When was Snafu released?

Snafu was released on 8 March 2023.

Who developed Snafu?

Snafu was developed by Stanislaw Truchowski and published by TurnVex.