Bio Goddess: Doomsday Begins

Bio Goddess: Doomsday Begins

Share on Bluesky

Loading critic reviews...

Deals

Finding deals...

Live Streams

Finding live streams...

About Bio Goddess: Doomsday Begins

Bio Goddess: Doomsday Begins is a third-person survival RPG set in a high school overrun by a biochemical threat. You play a female student figuring out a mystery tied to your father while managing resources and fighting mutated enemies. Developed by Z School Studio and released in 2025, it’s a PC-only single-player game blending stealth, combat, and puzzle-solving. The story weaves sci-fi horror with personal stakes, but the school setting feels cramped compared to open-world survival titles. Best for fans of tense, narrative-driven experiences with quick bursts of action.

Gameplay

The core loop mixes scavenging for medical supplies, navigating decaying classrooms, and avoiding or battling grotesque mutations. You’ll use a first-aid kit to heal between fights, which rely on basic gunplay and dodge mechanics. Stealth sections require crouching to evade patrols, while puzzles unlock backstory via lab reports. Sessions average 3-5 hours, with progression tied to uncovering fragmented memories about your father. Controls are responsive but lack customization. The school map is small, forcing backtracking, but the claustrophobic atmosphere amplifies tension.

What Players Think

Community ratings sit at 82% on PlayPile, 84% on Metacritic, and 78% on Reddit. 28% of players complete it, with an average playtime of 18 hours (some finish in 20). Moods: tense (84%), mysterious (67%), and frustrating (51%). Review snippets praise the “dark father-child mystery” but criticize repetitive enemy spawns and “buggy AI that teleports enemies.” Achievement completion is 63%, with 37 total, including one for surviving a boss fight. Pricey at $39.99, but 62% say it’s “worth it for the story.”

PlayPile's Take

A solid but flawed survival RPG. It’s best for players who enjoy short, atmospheric stories with resource management. The $40 price tag feels steep given the 18-hour runtime and technical hiccups. Achievements add replay value, but the school map is too small for its $39.99 cost. If you’ve finished games like The Last of Us or Dying Light, this could be a quick pick for its mystery and survival elements. Skip if you prefer open worlds or polished combat.

Game Modes

Single player

Achievements

Loading achievements...

Similar Games

Finding similar games...

Buzzing on Bluesky

Checking Bluesky...