Also On: Xbox 360, PC
Publisher: Double Eleven
Developer: Double Eleven/Coffee Stain Studios
Medium: Digital
Players: 1-4
Online: No
ESRB: T
Iโm really not sure how to review Goat Simulator. Itโs basically a joke game, born โ if Wikipedia is to be believed โ out of one manโs desire to teach his colleagues how to use Unreal Engine, and turned into a full-on game because of love for a funny fake trailer. Judging it by the same standards youโd apply to most other games seems like an exercise in missing the point. And yet, here the game is on Xbox, after having been to a huge hit on PC, which means that itโs not unfair to ask the question of whether thereโs any reason to spend real, actual money on something that looks like it never shouldโve gone beyond the โHeh, thatโs funnyโ stage.
Actually, the question is, โIs Goat Simulator any good?โ And the answer isโฆitโs far better than it has any right to be.
I mean, itโs not the kind of game you could sit down and just play for hours. No matter how much the developers tried to gamify being a goat โ with things like trophies and minigames scattered around the world, and objectives for each level โ the reality is youโre just running around as an indestructible goat in a world full of very breakable and explosive objects.
That said, if youโre like me, the latter half of that last sentence might be more than enough to pique and sustain your interest. My favourite things in gaming include a healthy sense of absurdity and the ability to cause massive explosions, and those are the two areas in which Goat Simulator excels. In terms of the latter, all you need to do to make a car explode is brush against it, and the resulting blast will be enough to launch you across the city. On a related note, the ragdoll animations here are fantastic, with every person you come into contact with prone to flopping over or flying away with only the slightest contact, regardless of whether itโs caused by a headbutt or a bit of wayward debris.
As you probably expect, Goat Simulatorโs sense of humor is equally over the top. This is a game where one of the power-ups is becoming Goat Satan, which you obtain by accessing a barely-hidden portal to Hell and which allows you to summon dead goats on command. No less absurd are the โmutationsโ that give you accessories like a wearable pitching machine, a jetpack, and, uh, Deadmau5โs head, the last of which allows you to instantly start a dance party wherever you go.
In other words, itโs all incredibly silly. Itโs also not particularly deep โ so again, if youโre looking for something you can play for hours and hours, this probably isnโt it. I mean, everything about the game appeals to me, and I could only take it in half-hour increments, so I canโt imagine how it would be for someone who isnโt in love with the concept. Goat Simulator isnโt exactly the kind of game thatโs going to win over people who are already suspicious that itโs just one big joke.
But thatโs because it is a joke. A big, dumb, gloriously fun joke, and one thatโs worth checking out when youโre just in the mood to see stuff get blown up by one insane goat.