
Upload Simulator
Progress bars that actually feel earned: Upload Simulator scratches a very specific itch for incremental fans, but manages it with less depth than its own sequels suggest is possible.
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

About Upload Simulator
I keep a mental tier list of incremental games based on how long they hold my attention past the first prestige reset, and Upload Simulator lands somewhere in the middle of that list. It is a light clicker-idle hybrid where you download files, upload them for credits and reputation, then reinvest those resources into faster connection speeds and bigger storage. The loop is exactly what it sounds like, and that is both its strength and its ceiling. The core progression has a satisfying early arc. You start by manually triggering transfers, watching those progress bars crawl forward, then gradually automate the pipeline enough to step away. Random events add minor texture to the session, things like internet disconnects, troll interruptions, or bonus upload requests that keep you glancing back at the screen. There is a reboot mechanic, the genre-standard prestige reset, that unlocks research technologies and multiplies your base throughput. Community feedback on the Steam forums surfaces a real pain point: research point scaling around the fourth and fifth reboot cycles slows to a frustrating crawl, and the numbers suggest that pacing needed another tuning pass. Sound levels have also drawn complaints, with the default audio apparently aggressive enough to drown out background media, though that is fixable in settings. Where Upload Simulator falls short for strategy-minded players is decision depth. The upgrade path is linear enough that there is rarely a meaningful choice between two competing build directions. You are optimising a single pipeline rather than weighing trade-offs between, say, storage efficiency versus connection throughput as rival investment paths. The hack system that shows up in later EnigmaDev titles is absent here, and its absence is noticeable once you hit mid-game. The sci-fi component theming is present but thin, functioning as flavour text rather than mechanical differentiation. For newcomers to the incremental genre, this is a reasonable entry point precisely because the decision space is narrow. There is no tutorial that will overwhelm you with systems, and the first couple of reboot cycles provide a clean demonstration of what prestige loops actually feel like in practice. If you have already logged hours in Idle Dyson Swarm, Universal Paperclips, or the later Upload Simulator Silicon, this original release will feel like a rough sketch of ideas that EnigmaDev refined in subsequent projects. That is not a reason to skip it entirely, but it is context worth having before you decide where in the franchise to start. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
Steam Deck & Linux
Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows XP/Vista/7/8 or 10
- Memory
- 512 MB RAM
- Storage
- 80 MB available space
- Graphics
- OpenGL 2 compatible video card
- Processor
- 2.3 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo or better
Community Discussion
Be the first to comment on Upload Simulator.
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- EnigmaDev Studios
- Publisher
- EnigmaDev Studios
- Release Date
- Sep 9, 2022