Koalas Deliv & Guy

Koalas Deliv & Guy

Ryo.Design Ryo.Design October 22, 2025
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About Koalas Deliv & Guy

Koalas Deliv & Guy is a physics-based platformer from Ryo.Design, released in October 2025 for PC. You play as a flying koala whose job is to blast shockwaves to push your buddy, Niceguy, toward checkpoints. The catch? One misstep and you restart. The game leans into chaotic physics and slapstick humor, with levels designed to test precision and patience. It’s a short, single-player experience that rewards quick reflexes and a tolerance for repeated failure. Think of it as a goofy, button-mashing take on puzzle platformers, wrapped in a cartoonish aesthetic.

Gameplay

You control the koala by tapping to launch it forward, creating shockwaves that propel Niceguy through the level. Timing and angle matter, too much force and you’ll overshoot, too little and you stall. Each level is a series of tight, physics-driven challenges where you tweak your approach after every reset. The controls are simple but demand precision, with a satisfying snap to the koala’s movement. Sessions are short bursts, often ending in Niceguy tumbling off-screen. There’s no combat or dialogue, just you, the koala’s momentum, and a goal that feels just out of reach. The challenge is the core loop, and it’s relentless.

What Players Think

The game holds a 4.1/5 average on PlayPile, with 68% of players completing it. Most sessions clock in at 3, 5 hours, though 20% report over 10 hours due to repeat attempts. Community moods split between 45% “frustrated,” 30% “entertained,” and 25% “curious.” One review calls it “a physics puzzle masquerading as a comedy,” while another gripes, “Too easy to accidentally over-rotate.” Completion rates drop sharply after level 15, where environmental hazards increase. Achievements (25 total) skew toward completionist challenges, with 60% of players earning at least half.

PlayPile's Take

Koalas Deliv & Guy is a $14.99 test of patience for fans of precision platformers. It’s best for those who enjoy methodical problem-solving and don’t mind replaying levels endlessly. The physics feel unfair at times, but the simplicity and humor keep it engaging. If you’ve burned hours in games like Braid or Human Fall Flat, this will scratch a similar itch. Avoid if you dislike permadeath or need narrative depth. The achievements add replay, but don’t expect a fair challenge. It’s a niche pick, but a polished one.

Game Modes

Single player

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