
Loading critic reviews...
Finding deals...
Finding live streams...
Deadline Delivery is a chaotic racing simulator where you play as Carl, a monkey driving a mail truck wired with explosives. GOOD1 Studios crafted this absurd indie title for PC, released March 16, 2026. The premise is simple: deliver packages before the bomb detonates. It’s a mix of high-speed street racing and tense time management, with single-player and multiplayer modes. The game leans into slapstick humor and over-the-top destruction, appealing to fans of fast-paced antics. Think of it as Postal meets Burnout, but with bananas and timers.
Each session is a frantic race against both the clock and the bomb’s countdown. You navigate city streets, highways, and shortcuts while avoiding obstacles, traffic, and pedestrians. Controls are responsive, with drift mechanics and nitro boosts adding spice. Multiplayer lets you team up or sabotage others, with explosives and hazards becoming part of the strategy. Missions vary, some require stealth, others brute speed. The bomb ticking down forces reckless decisions: speed through intersections or risk detonation. It’s not a deep sim, but it’s consistently ridiculous and addictive for short bursts.
PlayPile data shows 78% of players finish the campaign, averaging 14 hours of playtime. Community moods lean toward “frustrating but funny,” with 32% labeling it “addictive chaos.” MetaCritic scores hover at 72, with critics praising its absurdity but questioning reusability. Achievements include 50 total, with “Bomb Dodger” (surviving 100 seconds without exploding) being the most earned. Over 65% of players own the $19.99 base game, while 43% unlocked all 15 multiplayer maps. Reviews highlight the “stressful fun” but note it’s “not for patience seekers.”
Deadline Delivery thrives on manic energy and shared laughter. It’s best for groups of friends who enjoy trash-talking while racing, or solo players craving short, explosive sessions. At $19.99, it’s a low-risk purchase for its niche appeal. The 50 achievements add replay value, but the campaign’s 14-hour average playtime suggests it’s a flash in the pan. Skip if you prefer methodical games or take racing too seriously. For everyone else, it’s a goofy, high-octane way to waste time with friends or strangers.
Game Modes
Single player, Multiplayer
Loading achievements...
Finding similar games...
Checking Bluesky...