
Loading critic reviews...
Finding deals...
Finding live streams...
Free for Fall is a 3D party platformer from Baboon Digital that turns level design into a competitive sport. Released on November 7, 2025, it plays on PC and Mac. Up to four players take turns grabbing random obstacles like saw blades, spike traps, and rolling boulders from a shared box and placing them on a track. Once the course is set, everyone races through it, dodging their own and opponents’ traps. The game thrives on chaos, with solo challenges, co-op survival modes, and deathmatch lobbies. It’s a high-speed test of reflexes and creativity, where every session feels like a new daredevil stunt. [GAMEPMENT] The core loop is simple: build, run, repeat. Each round starts with a 90-second planning phase where you drag objects onto the course. Precision matters, place a pit too early and you’ll doom yourself, but a well-timed laser grid can eliminate rivals. Races are intense, requiring quick platforming and mid-air adjustments. Multiplayer modes pit you against others, while co-op challenges force teams to survive increasingly absurd trap combos. Controls are tight, with responsive jumps and grabs. The camera occasionally struggles with tight turns, but the frantic pacing keeps you forgiving. Solo mode offers 40+ handcrafted levels, but the real appeal is multiplayer, where friends (or strangers) turn the track into a death star.
Free for Fall holds a 4.2/5 on PlayPile, with 85% positive reviews. 65% of players finish the solo campaign, averaging 12 hours of playtime. Community moods skew chaotic (78%) and hilarious (63%), with memes about “unintentional suicides” dominating forums. Critics praise the “brutal yet inventive” trap system, though 15% complain about occasional camera glitches. Achievement hunters target the 35 unlockable modifiers, like “Sawblade Symphony” for surviving 20 rolling blades. A top review raves, “This is the best $20 I’ve ever spent, turns strangers into collaborators and friends into enemies.”
This game is a must for groups who love mayhem. At $19.99, it’s priced as a party staple, and the 3-player local co-op is a rare gem. Achievements add replay value, but solo mode feels secondary. If you enjoy crafting death traps and laughing through failures, Free for Fall hits its mark. Skip it if you prefer polished single-player stories, it’s a raw, ridiculous experience that works best with others.
Game Modes
Single player, Multiplayer, Co-operative
Loading achievements...
Finding similar games...
Checking Bluesky...