Compare WrestleQuest prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Mega Cat Studios. Published by Skybound Games. Released on 8/21/2023. Available on PC, Linux. Genres: Adventure, Indie, RPG. Metacritic score: 70/100.

Turn-based JRPG combat filtered through a pixel art wrestling fever dream - equal parts charming and uneven, but nothing else on PC comes close to this specific itch.

My first instinct with WrestleQuest was pure, almost embarrassing delight. Mega Cat Studios, a Pittsburgh-based indie outfit, built a toy-box world where action figures aspire to wrestling glory, Randy Savage is worshipped like a deity, and you can cut a promo before battling a velociraptor. That premise alone carries enormous goodwill, and for stretches the game absolutely honours it. The pixel art is warm and densely detailed, and the sound design earns its own kind of applause: crowd noise rises and falls with the drama of each bout, the overworld music keeps your foot tapping, and the combat grunts land comedy beats long after you think they would have worn thin. The mechanical heart here is genuinely novel. Every fight is a live performance in front of an interactive crowd, and the hype meter is the game's best idea: spam the same powerbomb three times and the audience starts to boo, empowering your opponents. Vary your moveset, land taunts at the right moment, and pull off Dramatic Moments - scripted in-match objectives that mirror the theatre of real wrestling - and the meter tops off, unlocking gimmicks your characters cannot access otherwise. There are twelve playable characters, each with distinct tag team moves that activate when paired with specific partners, and Hype Types let individual wrestlers fill multiple tactical roles depending on how you build them. Pinning opponents is its own mini-game, a moving meter you have to stop in a green zone three times, which keeps even routine fights from going fully passive. The design intent is clear and, in its better moments, it works. The problems are real though, and honest reviewers should flag them. The opening two to three hours are stubbornly linear and slow, and the game withholds its best systems longer than it should. The quick-time events that govern move damage are mercilessly fast and change button prompts every time, with no option to slow them down or skip them at launch - though a post-launch patch (version 1.1, released December 2023) added a minigame skip toggle and other quality-of-life fixes, which meaningfully improved the experience for players coming to it now. World traversal is sluggish even at a run, and dungeon backtracking is a recurring drag. The story, which juggles multiple protagonist threads including Muchacho Man's wide-eyed kayfabe devotion and Brink Logan's wrestling-family drama, loses momentum whenever it cuts between groups too quickly. The writing has personality and leans into the scripted-sport meta-commentary with real wit, but it arrives wrapped in a pacing structure that repeatedly interrupts its own best ideas. For players who love the era this game is worshipping - WCW, WWF Attitude Era, the specific Saturday-morning energy of classic wrestling toys - WrestleQuest functions as an almost overwhelming archive of affection. The licensed legends, the Easter eggs buried in NPC dialogue, the entrances you customize with pyrotechnics and music: it all reads as something made by people who genuinely lived this stuff. Players without that nostalgic hook will find the RPG mechanics competent but not exceptional on their own terms, and the narrative drags will sting harder without the fan-service cushion. The post-patch version on PC is noticeably smoother than at launch, which makes this a better recommendation in 2025 than it was at release. Kai, Scout Team

WrestleQuest
AdventureIndieRPG

WrestleQuest

Aug 21, 2023Mega Cat StudiosSkybound Games
GamerScout Says

Turn-based JRPG combat filtered through a pixel art wrestling fever dream - equal parts charming and uneven, but nothing else on PC comes close to this specific itch.

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Screenshots & Media

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About WrestleQuest

My first instinct with WrestleQuest was pure, almost embarrassing delight. Mega Cat Studios, a Pittsburgh-based indie outfit, built a toy-box world where action figures aspire to wrestling glory, Randy Savage is worshipped like a deity, and you can cut a promo before battling a velociraptor. That premise alone carries enormous goodwill, and for stretches the game absolutely honours it. The pixel art is warm and densely detailed, and the sound design earns its own kind of applause: crowd noise rises and falls with the drama of each bout, the overworld music keeps your foot tapping, and the combat grunts land comedy beats long after you think they would have worn thin. The mechanical heart here is genuinely novel. Every fight is a live performance in front of an interactive crowd, and the hype meter is the game's best idea: spam the same powerbomb three times and the audience starts to boo, empowering your opponents. Vary your moveset, land taunts at the right moment, and pull off Dramatic Moments - scripted in-match objectives that mirror the theatre of real wrestling - and the meter tops off, unlocking gimmicks your characters cannot access otherwise. There are twelve playable characters, each with distinct tag team moves that activate when paired with specific partners, and Hype Types let individual wrestlers fill multiple tactical roles depending on how you build them. Pinning opponents is its own mini-game, a moving meter you have to stop in a green zone three times, which keeps even routine fights from going fully passive. The design intent is clear and, in its better moments, it works. The problems are real though, and honest reviewers should flag them. The opening two to three hours are stubbornly linear and slow, and the game withholds its best systems longer than it should. The quick-time events that govern move damage are mercilessly fast and change button prompts every time, with no option to slow them down or skip them at launch - though a post-launch patch (version 1.1, released December 2023) added a minigame skip toggle and other quality-of-life fixes, which meaningfully improved the experience for players coming to it now. World traversal is sluggish even at a run, and dungeon backtracking is a recurring drag. The story, which juggles multiple protagonist threads including Muchacho Man's wide-eyed kayfabe devotion and Brink Logan's wrestling-family drama, loses momentum whenever it cuts between groups too quickly. The writing has personality and leans into the scripted-sport meta-commentary with real wit, but it arrives wrapped in a pacing structure that repeatedly interrupts its own best ideas. For players who love the era this game is worshipping - WCW, WWF Attitude Era, the specific Saturday-morning energy of classic wrestling toys - WrestleQuest functions as an almost overwhelming archive of affection. The licensed legends, the Easter eggs buried in NPC dialogue, the entrances you customize with pyrotechnics and music: it all reads as something made by people who genuinely lived this stuff. Players without that nostalgic hook will find the RPG mechanics competent but not exceptional on their own terms, and the narrative drags will sting harder without the fan-service cushion. The post-patch version on PC is noticeably smoother than at launch, which makes this a better recommendation in 2025 than it was at release. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:sub-5Hype Meter CombatTag Team MechanicsKayfabe StorytellingQTE-HeavyToy Box WorldWrestling Legends CameosMorality SystemPost-Launch PatchedSlow Burn Opening

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Gold

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 6 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10/11
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
15 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 670 or equivalent
Processor
Intel i5 750 or equivalent

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
70

Game Info

Developer
Mega Cat Studios
Publisher
Skybound Games
Release Date
Aug 21, 2023

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Frequently asked questions about WrestleQuest

Where can I buy WrestleQuest cheapest?

Compare WrestleQuest prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is WrestleQuest available on?

WrestleQuest is available on PC, Linux.

When was WrestleQuest released?

WrestleQuest was released on 21 August 2023.

Who developed WrestleQuest?

WrestleQuest was developed by Mega Cat Studios and published by Skybound Games.

Is WrestleQuest worth buying?

WrestleQuest holds a Metacritic score of 70/100, making it one of the standout Adventure titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.