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Endless Furry Slayer is a top-down shooter from Tegridy Made Games that dropped on PC in January 2026. You play as a lone warrior battling endless waves of anthropomorphic animals in a chaotic, no-holds-barred fight for survival. The game leans into its absurd premise with a focus on fast-paced action and escalating difficulty. It’s not about story or depth, it’s about reflexes, tactics, and seeing how long you can last before getting overwhelmed. The minimalist approach works if you’re into twitchy, high-score-chasing fun.
You control a customizable character in an open arena, dodging and shooting waves of furries that grow stronger and faster over time. Movement is smooth with a slight weight to it, letting you dodge projectiles or enemy charges. Combat revolves around managing ammo, health pickups, and temporary power-ups like area-of-effect bombs. Each session lasts 15, 30 minutes, with new enemies and environmental hazards randomly spawning to keep things unpredictable. Upgrades are earned between waves, but permadeath means mistakes reset your progress. The challenge is steep, players average 8 hours before hitting peak difficulty, and 78% finish the main survival loop.
Community rating is 4.2/5, with critics averaging 76%. 70% of players call it “Addictive,” while 65% label it “Chaotic” and 50% “Frustrating.” Average playtime is 8 hours, but completion rate is 78%, suggesting most push through. Achievement data shows 125 total trophies, with 74% unlocked on average, many tied to survival streaks and enemy-killing milestones. Reviews highlight the “perfect mix of chaos and challenge” but note “frustratingly aggressive difficulty spikes.” Some players gripe about repetitive enemy types, though procedural generation keeps runs from feeling stale.
At $19.99, Endless Furry Slayer offers solid value for fans of survival shooters and roguelike loops. It’s not impressive but excels as a pick-up-and-play stress test. The 74% achievement completion rate suggests it’s tough to master, but the randomized elements and upgrade system add replayability. Skip if you prefer narrative-driven or methodical gameplay. For those who thrive on short, intense sessions and don’t mind repeating the same mechanics, it’s a worthwhile $20 purchase.
Game Modes
Single player
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