Compare Uncle Chop's Rocket Shop prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Beard Envy. Published by Kasedo Games. Released on 12/5/2024. Available on PC. Genres: Indie, Simulation.

Read the manual or die. Uncle Chop's Rocket Shop turns spaceship repair into a brutal knowledge-retention roguelite that punishes button-mashers and rewards anyone who actually respects a grease-stained Grimoire.

My spreadsheet instincts kicked in the moment I realized this game treats its in-game repair manual the same way I treat patch notes: not optional reading. Uncle Chop's Rocket Shop is a roguelite fix-em-up where you play as Wilbur, a four-eyed anthropomorphic fox who inherits a podunk space garage and must repair a daily queue of busted spacecraft to pay a corporate rent called R.E.N.T. every three in-game days. Death resets the run entirely, but every failure arms you with procedural knowledge that no upgrade tree can give you. That loop is the whole point, and it is genuinely clever. The repair modules are where the game earns its reputation. Early jobs cover fuel systems, oil changes, and headlights, all taught through a lovingly-designed Grimoire binder that functions like a real technical manual under pressure. Then the game starts stacking absurdity on top of competence: the Rebreather module turns out to contain a miniature planet of snails that need tending to produce breathable oxygen, and some ships hide a short platformer section inside their hull. There are two structural modes to consider. Frantic Fixing imposes a roughly seven-minute daily timer and lets you take as many jobs as you can manage, with harder jobs paying better, which creates a constant risk-reward calculation. Focused Fixing removes the clock but caps you at three jobs per day, cranks repair difficulty, and penalizes mistakes more severely. Neither mode is forgiving, and the game's structure enforces a fixed cycle: day two drops a crash-landing ship on your workshop, day three hands you a mandatory job that can be flagged as instantly lethal if you slip up. The roguelite meta layer softens the grind somewhat. A currency called omens feeds into a jukebox in the basement that unlocks persistent perks like faster movement, upgraded starting tools, and reduced penalties for errors. The community reception sits on a genuine fault line. Enthusiasts praise the tactile satisfaction of mastering modules without consulting the manual anymore, pointing to a mastery curve that rewards patience in the same way learning a Rubik's solve algorithm does. Critics land on real issues: the meta upgrade loop is slow to pay out, certain instant-death events feel arbitrary rather than instructive, and controller input can be genuinely clunky during precision repair work, a bigger problem on console ports but worth knowing on PC if you prefer gamepad. A secondary complaint is structural repetition: because each day in the three-day R.E.N.T. cycle triggers the same scripted events, later runs can feel less like discovery and more like grinding a fixed schedule. Post-launch patches have addressed some balance complaints, though the core difficulty philosophy remains steep. The writing and world-building are consistently praised: dark cosmic-horror undertones sit alongside vulgar slapstick dialogue from characters like cafe manager Droose, and multiple narrative endings plus faction allegiances give completionists genuine incentive to survive long enough to see the story branch. Who is this for? If your gaming instinct is to ignore tutorials and figure things out through action, this will feel hostile. If you are the kind of player who color-codes crafting recipes and commits procedural steps to memory across sessions, the satisfaction curve here is exceptional. The Focused Fixing mode is actually the better entry point for methodical players despite its harsher mistake penalties, because removing the timer lets you actually read what you are doing. Treat the first five or six runs as orientation rather than attempts and the difficulty wall transforms into a learning gradient. It is not a game for everyone, and the balance has rough edges, but the core loop of consulting a manual, executing the repair physically through analog-stick tool movements, and building muscle memory run over run is unlike anything else in the genre. Diego, Scout Team

Uncle Chop's Rocket Shop
IndieSimulation

Uncle Chop's Rocket Shop

Dec 5, 2024Beard EnvyKasedo Games
GamerScout Says

Read the manual or die. Uncle Chop's Rocket Shop turns spaceship repair into a brutal knowledge-retention roguelite that punishes button-mashers and rewards anyone who actually respects a grease-stained Grimoire.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

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About Uncle Chop's Rocket Shop

My spreadsheet instincts kicked in the moment I realized this game treats its in-game repair manual the same way I treat patch notes: not optional reading. Uncle Chop's Rocket Shop is a roguelite fix-em-up where you play as Wilbur, a four-eyed anthropomorphic fox who inherits a podunk space garage and must repair a daily queue of busted spacecraft to pay a corporate rent called R.E.N.T. every three in-game days. Death resets the run entirely, but every failure arms you with procedural knowledge that no upgrade tree can give you. That loop is the whole point, and it is genuinely clever. The repair modules are where the game earns its reputation. Early jobs cover fuel systems, oil changes, and headlights, all taught through a lovingly-designed Grimoire binder that functions like a real technical manual under pressure. Then the game starts stacking absurdity on top of competence: the Rebreather module turns out to contain a miniature planet of snails that need tending to produce breathable oxygen, and some ships hide a short platformer section inside their hull. There are two structural modes to consider. Frantic Fixing imposes a roughly seven-minute daily timer and lets you take as many jobs as you can manage, with harder jobs paying better, which creates a constant risk-reward calculation. Focused Fixing removes the clock but caps you at three jobs per day, cranks repair difficulty, and penalizes mistakes more severely. Neither mode is forgiving, and the game's structure enforces a fixed cycle: day two drops a crash-landing ship on your workshop, day three hands you a mandatory job that can be flagged as instantly lethal if you slip up. The roguelite meta layer softens the grind somewhat. A currency called omens feeds into a jukebox in the basement that unlocks persistent perks like faster movement, upgraded starting tools, and reduced penalties for errors. The community reception sits on a genuine fault line. Enthusiasts praise the tactile satisfaction of mastering modules without consulting the manual anymore, pointing to a mastery curve that rewards patience in the same way learning a Rubik's solve algorithm does. Critics land on real issues: the meta upgrade loop is slow to pay out, certain instant-death events feel arbitrary rather than instructive, and controller input can be genuinely clunky during precision repair work, a bigger problem on console ports but worth knowing on PC if you prefer gamepad. A secondary complaint is structural repetition: because each day in the three-day R.E.N.T. cycle triggers the same scripted events, later runs can feel less like discovery and more like grinding a fixed schedule. Post-launch patches have addressed some balance complaints, though the core difficulty philosophy remains steep. The writing and world-building are consistently praised: dark cosmic-horror undertones sit alongside vulgar slapstick dialogue from characters like cafe manager Droose, and multiple narrative endings plus faction allegiances give completionists genuine incentive to survive long enough to see the story branch. Who is this for? If your gaming instinct is to ignore tutorials and figure things out through action, this will feel hostile. If you are the kind of player who color-codes crafting recipes and commits procedural steps to memory across sessions, the satisfaction curve here is exceptional. The Focused Fixing mode is actually the better entry point for methodical players despite its harsher mistake penalties, because removing the timer lets you actually read what you are doing. Treat the first five or six runs as orientation rather than attempts and the difficulty wall transforms into a learning gradient. It is not a game for everyone, and the balance has rough edges, but the core loop of consulting a manual, executing the repair physically through analog-stick tool movements, and building muscle memory run over run is unlike anything else in the genre. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Fix-em-UpManual-Reading RequiredTime-Loop NarrativeMultiple EndingsPersistent Meta UpgradesDark HumorKnowledge-Based ProgressionCosmic HorrorFrantic Fixing ModeFocused Fixing Mode

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 12 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 64-bit
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA Geforce GTX 1050
Processor
Intel Core i5 (Quad Core)
Sound Card
Windows Compatible Audio Device

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 64-bit
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA Geforce GTX 1060
Processor
Intel Core i5 (Quad Core)
Sound Card
Windows Compatible Audio Device

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
Beard Envy
Publisher
Kasedo Games
Release Date
Dec 5, 2024

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Price History

2026-06-083.49(lowest)

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What platforms is Uncle Chop's Rocket Shop available on?

Uncle Chop's Rocket Shop is available on PC.

When was Uncle Chop's Rocket Shop released?

Uncle Chop's Rocket Shop was released on 5 December 2024.

Who developed Uncle Chop's Rocket Shop?

Uncle Chop's Rocket Shop was developed by Beard Envy and published by Kasedo Games.