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Destroyer Burger is an indie simulator where you run a chaotic fast-food joint. Developed by Fennonauts, it launched January 28, 2026, exclusively on PC. The game focuses on split-second decision making: flip patties, stack toppings, and serve customers before they storm out. It’s a high-speed test of multitasking, with a single-player mode that escalates pressure as orders pile up. The goal? Keep the kitchen and front desk running without burning anything, or your reputation. Marketed as the fourth-best indie sim of 2025, it leans into frantic energy over polished presentation. Perfect if you crave a game that stresses you out in the best way.
You alternate between kitchen and front desk, using mouse/keyboard to manage orders. In the kitchen, drag ingredients onto a grill, flip items at precise intervals, and stack components into burgers. At the front desk, assign orders to customers, collect payments, and handle complaints. The real challenge is juggling both areas simultaneously. Miss a patty’s cook timer, and it’s a fire hazard. Let a customer wait too long, and they’ll leave a negative review. Speedruns aren’t possible, each session is a sprint against rising chaos. The controls are tight but demanding, with a learning curve that rewards muscle memory. Expect to restart levels after one misstep.
PlayPile users rate it 8.2/10, with 87% recommending it. 63% finish the game, averaging 14 hours played. Community moods: 78% chaotic, 65% addictive, 52% stressful. Reviewers praise its “masterpiece of micromanagement” but note it’s “a stress test in disguise.” Critics at The Simpit gave it 82/100, calling it “addictive but punishing.” Completion rates drop sharply after level 8, where order density spikes. 35 achievements exist, including “Burn 10 Patties in a Row” and “Perfect 5-Star Shift.” The game’s 40% discount on Steam ($19.99) makes it a low-risk pick for sim fans.
Destroyer Burger is a short, intense sim for players who thrive under pressure. It’s not deep, there’s no branching story or customization, but the core loop of chaos management is surprisingly satisfying. Pay $19.99 for 10, 15 hours of frantic fun, and aim for 35 achievements if you enjoy retries. Skip it if you prefer relaxed pacing or narrative-driven games. For those who love stress-testing their reflexes, this is a worthwhile challenge. Just don’t play it while hungry.
Game Modes
Single player
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