Compare Trolley Delayma prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by albertnez. Published by albertnez. Released on 10/3/2023. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Indie.

A free, 30-minute top-down puzzler born from a game jam that somehow earned a 98% positive rating on Steam. Clever, tightly scoped, and worth every second.

I have a soft spot for games that know exactly what they are and refuse to overstay their welcome, so Trolley Delayma had me at its premise: you are a tiny figure running around a top-down grid, frantically switching rail tracks to keep a runaway trolley away from victims while the clock on fate keeps ticking. It is disarmingly simple on the surface, and that is exactly the point. Originally built for the Ludum Dare 50 game jam around the theme "delay the inevitable", developer albertnez expanded the concept from its jam roots into a polished 20-level experience. The visual style draws clear inspiration from Baba Is You, all clean pixel tiles and readable iconography, and it works beautifully. Each level is its own small puzzle box: you have to read the track layout, anticipate the trolley's path, and physically walk your character over switches to redirect it in real time. That last part matters. This is not a static logic puzzle you sit and stare at. There is a twitchy, kinetic quality to it, where your spatial reasoning and your reflexes have to cooperate. Some puzzles are gentle and almost meditative. A handful later on will make you restart with the specific, satisfying frustration of a well-designed level rather than an unfair one. The community reception says a lot about how well the game lands its intentions. Sitting at 98% positive reviews on Steam from 184 players, the praise circles around the game's clever puzzle design and its charming, focused scope. The main criticism you will find is one that I consider a compliment in disguise: players want more. More levels, more mechanics, a level editor. When the complaint is "this ended too soon", the developer has done something right. A small number of players have flagged a loading screen hang on certain systems, which is worth knowing before you launch, though it appears isolated. At roughly 30 minutes to complete all 20 levels, Trolley Delayma does not try to be a weekend commitment. It is a Tuesday-afternoon game, a commute game, a "I have half an hour and I want to feel clever" game. The achievement list gives completionists a small extra layer of engagement without padding the runtime artificially. Controller support means you can play it comfortably away from your desk. It is also free, which removes almost every reason not to simply try it. What I love most about games like this is the clarity of craft. albertnez is a solo developer who makes, in their own words, tiny games, and Trolley Delayma is a tiny game that understands its own edges precisely. It does not invent a new genre or carry a sweeping emotional arc. It takes a meme-adjacent philosophical premise, strips it down to its most playable essence, and delivers a clean, confident little experience that leaves you wanting a sequel more than you resent the ending. For a free release, that is a genuinely impressive thing to pull off. Kai, Scout Team

Trolley Delayma
Indie

Trolley Delayma

Oct 3, 2023albertnez
GamerScout Says

A free, 30-minute top-down puzzler born from a game jam that somehow earned a 98% positive rating on Steam. Clever, tightly scoped, and worth every second.

PCMacLinux
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 Trolley Delayma

I have a soft spot for games that know exactly what they are and refuse to overstay their welcome, so Trolley Delayma had me at its premise: you are a tiny figure running around a top-down grid, frantically switching rail tracks to keep a runaway trolley away from victims while the clock on fate keeps ticking. It is disarmingly simple on the surface, and that is exactly the point. Originally built for the Ludum Dare 50 game jam around the theme "delay the inevitable", developer albertnez expanded the concept from its jam roots into a polished 20-level experience. The visual style draws clear inspiration from Baba Is You, all clean pixel tiles and readable iconography, and it works beautifully. Each level is its own small puzzle box: you have to read the track layout, anticipate the trolley's path, and physically walk your character over switches to redirect it in real time. That last part matters. This is not a static logic puzzle you sit and stare at. There is a twitchy, kinetic quality to it, where your spatial reasoning and your reflexes have to cooperate. Some puzzles are gentle and almost meditative. A handful later on will make you restart with the specific, satisfying frustration of a well-designed level rather than an unfair one. The community reception says a lot about how well the game lands its intentions. Sitting at 98% positive reviews on Steam from 184 players, the praise circles around the game's clever puzzle design and its charming, focused scope. The main criticism you will find is one that I consider a compliment in disguise: players want more. More levels, more mechanics, a level editor. When the complaint is "this ended too soon", the developer has done something right. A small number of players have flagged a loading screen hang on certain systems, which is worth knowing before you launch, though it appears isolated. At roughly 30 minutes to complete all 20 levels, Trolley Delayma does not try to be a weekend commitment. It is a Tuesday-afternoon game, a commute game, a "I have half an hour and I want to feel clever" game. The achievement list gives completionists a small extra layer of engagement without padding the runtime artificially. Controller support means you can play it comfortably away from your desk. It is also free, which removes almost every reason not to simply try it. What I love most about games like this is the clarity of craft. albertnez is a solo developer who makes, in their own words, tiny games, and Trolley Delayma is a tiny game that understands its own edges precisely. It does not invent a new genre or carry a sweeping emotional arc. It takes a meme-adjacent philosophical premise, strips it down to its most playable essence, and delivers a clean, confident little experience that leaves you wanting a sequel more than you resent the ending. For a free release, that is a genuinely impressive thing to pull off. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttier:indieTop-Down PuzzleReal-Time PuzzleGame JamQuick CompletionFree-to-PlayReaction-BasedBaba Is You-likeShort-Form

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 or higher
Memory
128 MB RAM
Storage
100 MB available space
Graphics
128MB OpenGL 3.3+
Processor
Dual Core 2GHz

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
albertnez
Publisher
albertnez
Release Date
Oct 3, 2023

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert