I wrote one-sentence reviews of over 70 Steam demos to help you decide which to try before Next Fest ends

You ever play so many game demos that your brain turns into a kind of game-infused gelatin capable only of learning new controls and input schemes? Well, I have, and I did it for you.

Below, you’ll find single-sentence assessments of nearly every one of the 83 demos I played during Steam Next Fest this month. I didn’t include my top five, because I wrote about them in a separate article, and I skipped a few that I didn’t think warranted even a brief comment, but I still wound up with 72 takes. My favorites of the list are bolded.

Monster Train 2 – It’s a more complicated Monster Train for people who liked Monster Train, I’m not sure what else you could want from it.

Sandustry – Noita meets Factorio in an oddly intriguing pixel-physics factory game.

Nomad Idle – Action RPG is an odd genre for the idle game treadmill.

Deliver At All Costs – This is like if the first few GTA games were about delivering packages and making ridiculous gadgets for your delivery truck. Kind of a great idea.

Machine Mind – Automate resource gathering and base defense in a Borderlands-style wasteland.

Mech Havoc – A tasty top-down blend of Brigador and MechWarrior weapons tweaking against always outnumbered, never outgunned missions.

Solarpunk – Bland survival with an eco-friendly gloss that’s barely skin deep.

Tempest Rising – An attempt to revive the spirit of Command & Conquer with all the good and bad that implies.

Mecha Break – You ever boot up a game so infected with free-to-play nonsense design that you just immediately uninstall?

Void War – Knockoff FTL plus knockoff Warhammer 40k isn’t doing it for me, but that combo might be exactly what someone’s been waiting for.

Wizdom Academy – Nobody has made an exceptional wizard school management sim yet, and I’m afraid that’s still the case.

Settler’s Domain – I almost quit this one because it started slow, but it’s actually a minimalist colony-builder where you’re supposed to go at top speed.

Behind the Sword – A minimalist, indie take on a grand strategy 4X game with a cool spherical grid.

RoadCraft screenshot

(Image credit: Saber Interactive)

RoadCraft – Surprisingly chill take on the genre from the SnowRunner devs, focused more on big truck logistics and less on vehicle simulation.

Grit and Valor – 1949 – Promising dieselpunk mech micro-RTS. Control a handful of units on tiny battlefields.

Drop Duchy – A promising tile-plopping city builder demo with a bit of a randomization problem.

He is Coming – A lo-fi roguelike RPG with a lot of promise and a strong style.

Desperate Place – This is just Thronefall, but sci-fi, and that doesn’t bother me.

Roman Triumph: Survival City Builder – A neat take on the survival city-builder blighted with some godawful AI art.

Icaria – A worker-programming factory building game that I’m not sure stands out from the pack.

Rise of Industry 2 – The ’80s landscape is cool but the mechanics and gameplay here are wafer thin.

Windward Horizon – Windward was cute, but I’m not sure it needs crafting and RPG mechanics this complex.

Guntouchables – Co-op action roguelikes are a pretty good idea. There should be more of them.

Game of Thrones: Kingsroad – Didn’t even make it to 15 minutes.

Darkwater – I’m sure this premise is great but the tiny fisheye field of view gives me motion sickness.

War Rats: The Rat em Up – This is completely unhinged but I think I like it, wishlisted.

War Rats screenshot

War Rats (Image credit: wootusart Industries)

Chip ‘n Clawz vs. The Brainioids – The rare action-strategy game, even rarer for its all-ages simplicity and friendliness for co-op play. From X-Com creator Julian Gollop!

Outworld Station – Quite pretty for an automation game, but inventory management gets tedious.

As We Descend – Stylish and fun, but balance issues have plagued every demo of this tactics roguelike.

Railgods of Hysterra – Co-op survival on a train through lovecraftrian hell is certainly a weird pitch, but it has my attention.

City Tales: Medieval Era – A charmingly simple medieval city-builder with a solid base for mechanics.

Task Force Admiral – A really promising glimpse at a very realistic wargame about a very cool era of being in charge of ships.

Yes, Your Grace: Snowfall – More Yes, Your Grace? Don’t mind if I do.

Dark Moon – A tiny slice of an interesting Frostpunk-esque premise about a walking city on the moon.

Chernobylite 2: Exclusion Zone – Another round of The Farm 51’s take on a bizarre, psychic horror Eastern European apocalypse.

The Horror at Highrook – Card-driven exploration of a haunted mansion inspired by early 20th century horror—I’ll keep my eye on it.

Radiolight – Solo developer takes on 1980s mystery thriller Firewatch and doesn’t do too bad a job, so far.

Is This Seat Taken? – An adorable, appealing logic puzzler about fitting very needy people into very particular seats.

Is This Seat Taken screenshot

Is This Seat Taken? (Image credit: Poti Poti Studio)

God Forsaken – A bland action roguelike.

Total Chaos – I’m not yet sold on this Doom mod turned standalone horror game, but it is pretty.

Nordhold – I’m a simple man: You give me hex-based grids and I’ll play your weird little tower defense demo. It was good, too.

Missing Banban – Weird little 2D platformer. Did not find Banban.

Wheel World – A bike racing adventure-sports game where you are chosen by the bike gods. That is not a joke. It’s also kind of good?

I Am Legion: Stand Survivors – One of the only promising bullet-hellish action roguelikes from the entire Next Fest—and even then just enough to keep watching.

Labyrinth of the Demon King – Delightfully atmospheric and somewhat upsetting first-person dungeon crawling survival horror game.

Unyielder – Boss rush movement FPS with looter shooting is probably exactly what some people want but it turns out I do not like that.

Reignbreaker – It’s a Hades-like action roguelike that has a pretty unique “medievalpunk” style and actually understands the “punk” part of that.

Urban Jungle – An adorably chill little game about fitting as many houseplants as possible into your tiny apartment.

Dagger Directive – I never figured someone would be doing a deliberately lo-fi Operation Flashpoint successor in 2025 but you know what, more power to them.

Star Crafter – This wants to be the blank in the Factorio : Dyson Sphere Program :: Satisfactory : ???? analogy.

Blightstone – I’m not 100% sold on the tactics part of this hardcore resource-management roguelike.

Redemption of Liuyin – I’m just not sure you can pull off soulslike and high-fidelity graphics at this scale and budget, but I wish them luck.

Cybertaxi: Lunatic Nights – A bit too jank for my endorsement, but taxi driving in the kind of city where you need a flamethrower on your car is too fun a premise not to watch.

MechaKnights Legends – Really early proof-of-concept demo here, but fantasy mecha Monster Hunter is a good idea.

Jitter – A funky little spaceship management game that needs some control refinement.

Jitter

Jitter (Image credit: Berko Games)

Rock Crusher – It’s early in development, but these are the solid bones of an incremental time-waster.

Chaos Front – China’s foremost—to me, at least—indie strategy developer turns their hand to mech mercenary management.

Savara – A nicely pastel action-roguelike that’s more fun than it appears in trailers.

Pochemeow – A strange little strategy game about running trade wars.

Death Ring: Second Impact – An intriguing little mecha tactics game about taking down waves of giant monsters.

Mystical Tactics – Lo-fi tactical RPG that moves at a nice quick pace.

Uber Urban – An indie city builder with a few novel mechanics.

Sweep – A dungeon deckbuilder where you pick whatever cards you want from your hand, which reveals why we draw random hands to be honest.

Anoxia Station – Wouldn’t have thought that a combination of colony sim and horror would work at all, but it does.

Starless Abyss – A thematically rad, rather hard deckbuilder about sci-fi scientists and occultists teaming up to battle eldritch horrors.

Scarecrow – Somehow furry Hotline Miami is more upsetting than regular Hotline Miami.

Wanderstop – A very wholesome little life sim from the dev of Stanley Parable and The Beginner’s Guide—worth watching.

Conquest Dark – An action RPG that only runs on turbo fast mode, which is what’s good and bad about it.

Fumes

(Image credit: Fumes Team)

Fumes – A lo-fi vehicular combat game that was very, very close to being in my top 5.

Dice Legends – A cards and dice battler with not much to recommend it over others—still, genre lovers might want to take a look.

Neongarten – A delightfully minimalist cyberpunk puzzle city builder that jumped right onto my wishlist.

Where Noble Plans Lie – It needs work, but the idea of a city builder where you’re actually trying to ruin the kingdom is cool.

Steam sale dates: When’s the next event?
Epic Store free games: What’s free right now?
Free PC games: The best freebies you can grab
2025 games: This year’s upcoming releases
Free Steam games: No purchase necessary

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