Compare Wobbly Life prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by RubberBandGames. Published by RubberBandGames. Released on 9/18/2025. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action, Adventure, Casual, Indie, Simulation.

If you have three friends and an evening to burn, this physics sandbox earns its keep. Solo, the joke gets old faster than you'd hope.

I'll be upfront: Wobbly Life is not built for someone who color-codes their Paradox save files. There are no tech trees, no supply chain optimizations, no late-game crises to manage. What there IS, however, is a surprisingly dense open-world sandbox that graduated from Early Access in September 2025 with a full 1.0 release and a Space update bundled in, and it has been sitting on overwhelmingly positive Steam user reviews since. That context matters when you're deciding whether to pull a co-op group in. The core loop is straightforward by design. Your grandma boots you out of the house, and from there the whole island is open immediately with no gating by player count or progression milestones. You take jobs, earn cash, and spend it on clothes, vehicles, or property ranging from a wooden shack to a mansion with a helipad. The job roster covers taxi driving, pizza delivery, firefighting, paramedic work, nuclear waste disposal, farming, disco dancing, mining, and more, each one built around the game's rag-doll physics rather than precision input. Your arms are controlled independently via the triggers, grabbing onto surfaces and objects in a way that turns even a simple jelly delivery into a minor catastrophe. Jobs pay out into a money bag that you then have to physically carry to an ATM, which is a small but telling detail: the friction is the feature. Alongside the island's main content, the Wobbly Space Programme unlocks once you have enough in-game currency and pass a short quiz and physical exam, adding a separate world with low gravity, space-adapted jobs, and its own currency in Space Credits. The Arcade mode rounds things out with Trash Zone, Hide and Seek, Wobble Run (a barely disguised Fall Guys mode), and a freeform Sandbox option. Where it works: the co-op scenarios genuinely deliver. A firefighting mission with four people on the hose devolves into everyone accidentally spraying each other rather than the blaze, and that kind of emergent slapstick is hard to manufacture deliberately. Up to four players can play online or in local split-screen, and the multi-stage jobs share structural DNA with Overcooked and Moving Out in that communication and coordination produce as many disasters as successes. Steam Workshop support means community content is already flowing, which gives the sandbox legs beyond the base content. Where it doesn't: solo play is the honest weak point. Jobs feel slower and more repetitive without a co-op partner to share the chaos with, and some of the timed missions are balanced with group effort in mind, making solo completion feel laborious rather than challenging. The Xbox version has drawn specific criticism for input delay, with some players reporting noticeable lag stretches that make even basic movement unreliable. The PC version appears free of that issue in most accounts. Graphically, the style sits closer to Flash-era browser games than anything that will stress modern hardware, which is fine for what it is, but worth knowing before you go in expecting polish. For parents researching a family-friendly sandbox, Wobbly Life is one of the cleaner answers available: no violence, no aggressive monetization, Workshop support for community mods, and controls accessible enough that younger players can contribute meaningfully within minutes of starting. For adult strategy players like me, treating this as a party game rather than a solo experience is the correct frame. Put it in front of a group with controllers, pick a chaotic job, and let the physics engine do the writing. Diego, Scout Team

Wobbly Life
ActionAdventureCasualIndieSimulation

Wobbly Life

Sep 18, 2025RubberBandGames
GamerScout Says

If you have three friends and an evening to burn, this physics sandbox earns its keep. Solo, the joke gets old faster than you'd hope.

PCXbox
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Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Wobbly Life

I'll be upfront: Wobbly Life is not built for someone who color-codes their Paradox save files. There are no tech trees, no supply chain optimizations, no late-game crises to manage. What there IS, however, is a surprisingly dense open-world sandbox that graduated from Early Access in September 2025 with a full 1.0 release and a Space update bundled in, and it has been sitting on overwhelmingly positive Steam user reviews since. That context matters when you're deciding whether to pull a co-op group in. The core loop is straightforward by design. Your grandma boots you out of the house, and from there the whole island is open immediately with no gating by player count or progression milestones. You take jobs, earn cash, and spend it on clothes, vehicles, or property ranging from a wooden shack to a mansion with a helipad. The job roster covers taxi driving, pizza delivery, firefighting, paramedic work, nuclear waste disposal, farming, disco dancing, mining, and more, each one built around the game's rag-doll physics rather than precision input. Your arms are controlled independently via the triggers, grabbing onto surfaces and objects in a way that turns even a simple jelly delivery into a minor catastrophe. Jobs pay out into a money bag that you then have to physically carry to an ATM, which is a small but telling detail: the friction is the feature. Alongside the island's main content, the Wobbly Space Programme unlocks once you have enough in-game currency and pass a short quiz and physical exam, adding a separate world with low gravity, space-adapted jobs, and its own currency in Space Credits. The Arcade mode rounds things out with Trash Zone, Hide and Seek, Wobble Run (a barely disguised Fall Guys mode), and a freeform Sandbox option. Where it works: the co-op scenarios genuinely deliver. A firefighting mission with four people on the hose devolves into everyone accidentally spraying each other rather than the blaze, and that kind of emergent slapstick is hard to manufacture deliberately. Up to four players can play online or in local split-screen, and the multi-stage jobs share structural DNA with Overcooked and Moving Out in that communication and coordination produce as many disasters as successes. Steam Workshop support means community content is already flowing, which gives the sandbox legs beyond the base content. Where it doesn't: solo play is the honest weak point. Jobs feel slower and more repetitive without a co-op partner to share the chaos with, and some of the timed missions are balanced with group effort in mind, making solo completion feel laborious rather than challenging. The Xbox version has drawn specific criticism for input delay, with some players reporting noticeable lag stretches that make even basic movement unreliable. The PC version appears free of that issue in most accounts. Graphically, the style sits closer to Flash-era browser games than anything that will stress modern hardware, which is fine for what it is, but worth knowing before you go in expecting polish. For parents researching a family-friendly sandbox, Wobbly Life is one of the cleaner answers available: no violence, no aggressive monetization, Workshop support for community mods, and controls accessible enough that younger players can contribute meaningfully within minutes of starting. For adult strategy players like me, treating this as a party game rather than a solo experience is the correct frame. Put it in front of a group with controllers, pick a chaotic job, and let the physics engine do the writing. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayercooponline-cooplocal-coopachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardsworkshopcloud-savestier:aaaPhysics Sandbox4-Player Co-opRagdoll PhysicsFamily FriendlyParty GameOpen World JobsSplit-ScreenSteam WorkshopSpace ExplorationCouch Co-op

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 25 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 (64 Bit)
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 1060 or equivalent
Processor
Intel Core i7-6700 or equivalent

Recommended

OS
Windows 11 (64 Bit)
Memory
16 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 1650 or equivalent
Processor
Intel Core i7-13700K or equivalent

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
RubberBandGames
Publisher
RubberBandGames
Release Date
Sep 18, 2025

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What platforms is Wobbly Life available on?

Wobbly Life is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Wobbly Life released?

Wobbly Life was released on 18 September 2025.

Who developed Wobbly Life?

Wobbly Life was developed by RubberBandGames.