Reviews

Don’t Touch This Button review for PS4/5, Xbox One/Series X, Switch

Platform: PS5
Also on: PC, PS4, Switch, Xbox One, Xbox Series X
Publisher: Ratalaika Games
Developer: 9 Eyes Game Studio
Medium: Digital
Players: 1
Online: No
ESRB: E

A couple of years ago, I played a fantastic game called Please Don’t Touch Anything. The objective: don’t touch anything. Or, alternatively, do touch things, and risk facing the apocalypse. It wasn’t a complicated premise, nor was it a long game, but Please Don’t Touch Anything managed to get an impressive amount of mileage — and humour — from that basic scenario.

Don’t Touch This Button is the same basic set-up as Please Don’t Touch Anything, just worse in almost every way.

For one thing, it’s not nearly as smart or as funny as it seems to think it is. Rather than asking players to solve increasingly lengthy, complicated, bizarre puzzles, Don’t Touch This Button sticks you in a room and prominently displays how not to solve the puzzle right on a giant screen. The twist/joke — which reveals itself immediately and then serves as a template for the other 59 levels, so this is hardly spoiler territory — is that you just do the opposite of whatever it displays, and you easily move on to the next level.

To be fair, there’s the odd level where you need to think a little more. Some require codes, for example, that may call for a bit of logical thinking, while others require some trial-and-error as the ground beneath your feet disappears after you step on it. Such levels, however, are few and far between.

There’s also a boss fight at the end that kind of comes out of nowhere, as you fight against a giant computer. It kind of comes out of nowhere, it’s nothing like anything else in the entire game, and it doesn’t really add anything to any of it.

Obviously, Don’t Touch This Button is hampered by the fact that other games have mined very similar territory, and done the same kind of thing much better. If this were a world where none of those games existed, Don’t Touch This Button might have more to recommend it, but as it stands, you should probably just play those games instead.

Ratalaika Games provided us with a Don’t Touch This Button PS4/PS5 code for review purposes.

Grade: C-
Matthew Pollesel

Recent Posts

Ride the rails on the surface in Goddess of Victory: NIKKE’s newest event Terminus Ticket

Didn’t think I’d have to be good at adding to 10 in a Gacha game…but…

6 hours ago

IO Interactive debuts a new series to showcase their thoughts and processes as they develop 007: First Light

It’s always good to see what’s shaken or stirred in the development process.

10 hours ago

Romeo is a Dead Man due for a February 11th, 2026 release

Now what is that game with the “9” in its title which Suda was alluding…

14 hours ago

Kirby Air Riders review for Nintendo Switch 2

The secret successor to Super Smash Bros Ultimate? Why not!

15 hours ago

Sony Interactive Entertainment teams up with Bad Robot Games to produce their first internally developed title

Sony and Bad Robot Games are working on a 4-player co-op shooter under the direction…

1 day ago

Nintendo eShop Update – Metroid Prime 4: Beyond, Assassin’s Creed Shadows, Red Dead Redemption, MARVEL Cosmic Invasion

There's a very well-rounded selection of new Nintendo eShop titles, content and sales launching today/soon…

1 day ago

This website uses cookies.