
Upside Down
A scarecrow picking through deadly traps and hostile wildlife - this micro puzzle-platformer earned its 'Very Positive' badge the quiet way, one tightly designed level at a time.
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Screenshots & Media

About Upside Down
I have a soft spot for the tiny Steam releases that nobody writes a feature about, and Upside Down is exactly that kind of game. You play as a scarecrow making a desperate run through levels stocked with lethal traps and unfriendly wildlife, and the whole thing is built around one idea: precision. Every jump, every route choice, every moment of hesitation has weight. That is either going to pull you in or push you away inside the first ten minutes, and the game seems quietly aware of that. The level design is where Upside Down earns its keep. Each stage is designed to feel distinct rather than recycled, and the puzzle layer sitting underneath the platforming asks you to read the geometry carefully before committing to movement. The scarecrow framing is a small creative choice, but it gives the game an odd, faintly melancholy atmosphere that a generic robot or square-headed mascot would not have delivered. There is something a little lonely and stubborn about a scarecrow running for its life, and the game does not oversell that mood, which is the right call. The criticism that will land for some players is brevity and scope. This is not a deep-systems game. There are no upgrades, no branching paths, no unlockable classes. What you get is a clean, single-purpose loop: get through the level, do not die on the spikes, find the path the designer intended. Controller support is present, which matters for a game this reflex-dependent, and the cross-platform availability on Windows, Mac, and Linux is a quiet bonus that many comparable indie releases skip. Steam achievements give completionists a secondary target once the credits roll. Where it shows its age and its budget is in the lack of any community infrastructure. No discussion threads, no guides, no speedrun scene that has taken root. For a puzzle-platformer this precise, the absence of a hint system or optional assist mode means newcomers either adapt or bounce. The game does not meet you halfway. That is a deliberate design posture, but it is worth naming honestly before you click install. If you have twenty minutes and a tolerance for clean, unforgiving 2D movement, Upside Down is a more considered experience than its tiny footprint suggests. It will not change your year. It might, however, be a perfectly formed small thing that knows exactly what it is - and in a storefront full of games that do not, that counts for something. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
Steam Deck & Linux
Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows XP or Later
- Memory
- 1 GB RAM
- Storage
- 600 MB available space
- Graphics
- 256 MB or higher
- Processor
- 1.5GHZ +
Community Discussion
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Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- EGAMER
- Publisher
- SA Industry
- Release Date
- Feb 14, 2017



