Compare The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Crows Crows Crows. Published by Crows Crows Crows. Released on 4/27/2022. Available on PC, Mac, Linux, Xbox. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie. Metacritic score: 94/100.

A first-person office maze that rebuilds the 2013 original from the ground up and then quietly dismantles the very concept of re-releasing a game you already loved.

I want to tell you everything about The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe, and I also genuinely cannot. That tension is, fittingly, the whole point. What I can say is that it starts in a grey office, with a disembodied British narrator voiced by Kevan Brighting, who describes what you, playing as Stanley, are about to do next. Whether you actually do it is up to you. Follow the narrator's instructions or ignore them, and the story branches into one of dozens of distinct outcomes, each complete and self-contained, before the whole thing resets and you try again. The loop sounds thin on paper. In practice it is one of the most deliberately, precisely constructed experiences in games. Ultra Deluxe began life as a 2013 Half-Life 2 mod, grew into a standalone release, and has now been rebuilt entirely in Unity by Crows Crows Crows, written by Davey Wreden and William Pugh. The reconstruction is so faithful that it took multiple hours for some players to notice the engine swap. The new content arrives mid-playthrough via a literal door labelled "NEW CONTENT" in the familiar office corridor, and from there the game shifts into something that functions almost as a sequel. Where the original examined player agency and the illusion of choice in video games, the Ultra Deluxe additions turn that lens on game development itself: on sequels, on reviews, on the hype machine, on what an audience actually wants from a creator and whether any of that matters. A Memory Zone space lets the narrator revisit critical reception of the original game, positive and negative, and the game uses that structure to say things about the industry that feel pointed without ever becoming preachy. The humor is sharp and the absurdism escalates to places that are genuinely surprising. The honest caveat for returning players is that you are spending a fair portion of the runtime replaying content you already know. The map has not changed substantially, and much of the new material is gated behind seeing several of the original endings first, though the game does offer a skip option at the very start if you want to fast-track to the additions. For first-timers, the opening runs carry commentary that has aged slightly given how many games have attempted similar meta-humor in the decade since. The game is aware of this, which is either reassuring or a little maddening depending on your tolerance for self-reference. Dialogue can run long on repeat paths, and there is no conventional skip function mid-run, though the game is, again, very conscious of that complaint in ways I will not spoil. What lands consistently is the craft. The soundscape carries a quiet, institutional melancholy that keeps the office from feeling like a parody set. Brighting's narration is the whole emotional register of the game, swinging from pomposity to genuine warmth to something almost wistful in the new endings. There are around 46 endings in total across the original and new content, some taking minutes, some demanding patience and repetition. Achievement hunters will find the list deliberately designed to require exactly the kind of stubborn experimentation the game is about. For a game that could technically be completed in five minutes, the hours add up in a way that feels intentional rather than padded. If you have never played any version of The Stanley Parable, Ultra Deluxe is the correct place to start. If you played the original and thought it was clever but slight, the new content specifically addresses that response, which is either generous or confrontational depending on how you approach it. Go in knowing as little as possible. The fewer specifics you carry through that office door, the more the game gives back. Kai, Scout Team

The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe

The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe

Apr 27, 2022Crows Crows Crows
GamerScout Says

A first-person office maze that rebuilds the 2013 original from the ground up and then quietly dismantles the very concept of re-releasing a game you already loved.

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About The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe

I want to tell you everything about The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe, and I also genuinely cannot. That tension is, fittingly, the whole point. What I can say is that it starts in a grey office, with a disembodied British narrator voiced by Kevan Brighting, who describes what you, playing as Stanley, are about to do next. Whether you actually do it is up to you. Follow the narrator's instructions or ignore them, and the story branches into one of dozens of distinct outcomes, each complete and self-contained, before the whole thing resets and you try again. The loop sounds thin on paper. In practice it is one of the most deliberately, precisely constructed experiences in games. Ultra Deluxe began life as a 2013 Half-Life 2 mod, grew into a standalone release, and has now been rebuilt entirely in Unity by Crows Crows Crows, written by Davey Wreden and William Pugh. The reconstruction is so faithful that it took multiple hours for some players to notice the engine swap. The new content arrives mid-playthrough via a literal door labelled "NEW CONTENT" in the familiar office corridor, and from there the game shifts into something that functions almost as a sequel. Where the original examined player agency and the illusion of choice in video games, the Ultra Deluxe additions turn that lens on game development itself: on sequels, on reviews, on the hype machine, on what an audience actually wants from a creator and whether any of that matters. A Memory Zone space lets the narrator revisit critical reception of the original game, positive and negative, and the game uses that structure to say things about the industry that feel pointed without ever becoming preachy. The humor is sharp and the absurdism escalates to places that are genuinely surprising. The honest caveat for returning players is that you are spending a fair portion of the runtime replaying content you already know. The map has not changed substantially, and much of the new material is gated behind seeing several of the original endings first, though the game does offer a skip option at the very start if you want to fast-track to the additions. For first-timers, the opening runs carry commentary that has aged slightly given how many games have attempted similar meta-humor in the decade since. The game is aware of this, which is either reassuring or a little maddening depending on your tolerance for self-reference. Dialogue can run long on repeat paths, and there is no conventional skip function mid-run, though the game is, again, very conscious of that complaint in ways I will not spoil. What lands consistently is the craft. The soundscape carries a quiet, institutional melancholy that keeps the office from feeling like a parody set. Brighting's narration is the whole emotional register of the game, swinging from pomposity to genuine warmth to something almost wistful in the new endings. There are around 46 endings in total across the original and new content, some taking minutes, some demanding patience and repetition. Achievement hunters will find the list deliberately designed to require exactly the kind of stubborn experimentation the game is about. For a game that could technically be completed in five minutes, the hours add up in a way that feels intentional rather than padded. If you have never played any version of The Stanley Parable, Ultra Deluxe is the correct place to start. If you played the original and thought it was clever but slight, the new content specifically addresses that response, which is either generous or confrontational depending on how you approach it. Go in knowing as little as possible. The fewer specifics you carry through that office door, the more the game gives back.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supportMeta-NarrativeWalking SimMultiple EndingsFourth-Wall BreakingReplayabilityDark HumorShort-Session FriendlyAchievement Hunting

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
Intel Core i3 2.00 GHz or AMD equivalent
Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce 450 or higher with 1GB Memory
Storage
5 GB available space

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
94

Game Info

Developer
Crows Crows Crows
Publisher
Crows Crows Crows
Release Date
Apr 27, 2022

Game Modes

singleplayer

Languages

Audio (1)
English
Subtitles (12)
EnglishFrenchItalianGermanRussianSpanish - Spain+6 more

Features

AchievementsController Support

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What platforms is The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe available on?

The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe is available on PC, Mac, Linux, Xbox.

When was The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe released?

The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe was released on 27 April 2022.

Who developed The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe?

The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe was developed by Crows Crows Crows.

Is The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe worth buying?

The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe holds a Metacritic score of 94/100, making it one of the standout Adventure titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.