Compare Space Cows prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Happy Corruption. Published by Untold Tales. Released on 9/5/2019. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Indie.

Fart-propelled zero-gravity shooter with a charm offensive so thick it almost papers over some genuinely punishing design choices. Know what you're getting into.

My first few minutes with Space Cows felt like someone had handed me a cartoon from a parallel universe where Boogerman went to space and packed a toilet plunger instead of a blaster. That framing is not a complaint. Happy Corruption's debut leans hard into gross-out absurdity, and for a certain stripe of player, that commitment lands. You play as Best Regards, a chubby dairy farmer who disguises himself as a cow, gets himself abducted, and winds up aboard a mootant-infested zero-gravity space station with nothing but an unlimited supply of thrown plungers and a frankly heroic reserve of flatulence. The setup is delivered via a Star Wars-style opening crawl that opens with the line 'The story so fart', which tells you everything you need to know about the register this game is operating in. Mechanically, Space Cows sits somewhere in the neighbourhood of Assault Android Cactus without the roguelite scaffolding, or Enter the Gungeon if you stripped out the build variety. You move freely in all directions through zero-gravity corridors, which means momentum is always working against you. Best Regards does not stop when you do, and early on the drift feels like a genuine liability. It clicks eventually, and once it does, the fart-dash (a propulsion dodge that vaults you out of laser fire) and the slow-motion bullet-time ability start to feel like a cohesive toolkit rather than a gimmick pile. A Rage Mode combo bar fills as you hit enemies, and when it triggers you can flood the screen with faster, stronger plunger shots. These moments are the game at its most satisfying, though they come less frequently than you might want. Health is managed through a lives system: take five hits on intermediate difficulty, collect milk cartons scattered through levels, or farm milk bubbles to refill your carton. The 'Milk Must Flow' minigames, scattered at checkpoints, offer extra lives if you can complete increasingly frantic dairy-themed objectives under a timer. They are odd, brief, and weirdly endearing. Here is the honest part. Space Cows carries some structural baggage that dims the warmth. Levels are linear and long, enemy variety is thin until the back half, and the single checkpoint per stage evaporates the moment you quit the game, meaning every new session starts you from scratch. For shorter sessions that is a genuine friction point. The humor also has a saturation problem: the fart sound effects, by hour two, have exhausted their novelty faster than the levels do. Critics noted the difficulty spikes as another stumbling block, and they are correct. This is not a game that eases you in with patience. Casual twin-stick players will hit a wall and probably not push through it. What keeps me interested, despite those caveats, is the visual craft. The cartoon aesthetic is cheerful and confident, all saturated pinks and purples against alien green enemies, and the music shifts dynamically when you enter a locked combat room, which is a small thing done well. For a first release from a solo-ish indie team, the handmade quality shows in the right places. The premise is committed to with zero ironic distance, and that sincerity has a texture that a lot of more polished budget shooters lack. If your appetite for dairy puns and toilet-based projectile comedy matches the energy Happy Corruption is putting out, there is a scrappy, arcade-shaped thing here worth your time. If you need enemy variety, meaningful checkpointing, or humor that ages past the first hour, this one may curdle. Kai, Scout Team

Space Cows
ActionIndie

Space Cows

Sep 5, 2019Happy CorruptionUntold Tales
GamerScout Says

Fart-propelled zero-gravity shooter with a charm offensive so thick it almost papers over some genuinely punishing design choices. Know what you're getting into.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

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About Space Cows

My first few minutes with Space Cows felt like someone had handed me a cartoon from a parallel universe where Boogerman went to space and packed a toilet plunger instead of a blaster. That framing is not a complaint. Happy Corruption's debut leans hard into gross-out absurdity, and for a certain stripe of player, that commitment lands. You play as Best Regards, a chubby dairy farmer who disguises himself as a cow, gets himself abducted, and winds up aboard a mootant-infested zero-gravity space station with nothing but an unlimited supply of thrown plungers and a frankly heroic reserve of flatulence. The setup is delivered via a Star Wars-style opening crawl that opens with the line 'The story so fart', which tells you everything you need to know about the register this game is operating in. Mechanically, Space Cows sits somewhere in the neighbourhood of Assault Android Cactus without the roguelite scaffolding, or Enter the Gungeon if you stripped out the build variety. You move freely in all directions through zero-gravity corridors, which means momentum is always working against you. Best Regards does not stop when you do, and early on the drift feels like a genuine liability. It clicks eventually, and once it does, the fart-dash (a propulsion dodge that vaults you out of laser fire) and the slow-motion bullet-time ability start to feel like a cohesive toolkit rather than a gimmick pile. A Rage Mode combo bar fills as you hit enemies, and when it triggers you can flood the screen with faster, stronger plunger shots. These moments are the game at its most satisfying, though they come less frequently than you might want. Health is managed through a lives system: take five hits on intermediate difficulty, collect milk cartons scattered through levels, or farm milk bubbles to refill your carton. The 'Milk Must Flow' minigames, scattered at checkpoints, offer extra lives if you can complete increasingly frantic dairy-themed objectives under a timer. They are odd, brief, and weirdly endearing. Here is the honest part. Space Cows carries some structural baggage that dims the warmth. Levels are linear and long, enemy variety is thin until the back half, and the single checkpoint per stage evaporates the moment you quit the game, meaning every new session starts you from scratch. For shorter sessions that is a genuine friction point. The humor also has a saturation problem: the fart sound effects, by hour two, have exhausted their novelty faster than the levels do. Critics noted the difficulty spikes as another stumbling block, and they are correct. This is not a game that eases you in with patience. Casual twin-stick players will hit a wall and probably not push through it. What keeps me interested, despite those caveats, is the visual craft. The cartoon aesthetic is cheerful and confident, all saturated pinks and purples against alien green enemies, and the music shifts dynamically when you enter a locked combat room, which is a small thing done well. For a first release from a solo-ish indie team, the handmade quality shows in the right places. The premise is committed to with zero ironic distance, and that sincerity has a texture that a lot of more polished budget shooters lack. If your appetite for dairy puns and toilet-based projectile comedy matches the energy Happy Corruption is putting out, there is a scrappy, arcade-shaped thing here worth your time. If you need enemy variety, meaningful checkpointing, or humor that ages past the first hour, this one may curdle. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:sub-5Zero-Gravity MovementFart-Dash MechanicBullet-Time CombatArcade Lives SystemGross-Out HumorPlunger ProjectileMinigame InterruptsRage Mode Combo

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7, 8.1, 10 (64-bit)
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 650Ti with 2 GB VRAM or better
Processor
Intel Core 2 Quad or better

Recommended

OS
Windows 7, 8.1, 10 (64-bit)
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GTX 960 with 4 GB VRAM or better
Processor
Intel Core i5 or better

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Game Info

Developer
Happy Corruption
Publisher
Untold Tales
Release Date
Sep 5, 2019

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What platforms is Space Cows available on?

Space Cows is available on PC.

When was Space Cows released?

Space Cows was released on 5 September 2019.

Who developed Space Cows?

Space Cows was developed by Happy Corruption and published by Untold Tales.