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Silivri is a chaotic open-world co-op game from GalaxyVerse, released on November 28, 2025, for PC. It mixes adventure, simulation, and tactical elements with a heavy dose of dark humor. Set in Silivri City, the game tasks players with completing missions like money laundering, car chases, and betrayal while navigating a world where nonsense is the norm. Every NPC feels like a character from a deranged sitcom, and the main objective, delivering laundry to inmates, only deepens the absurdity. The game thrives on unpredictability, whether you’re teaming up with friends or sabotaging them. Its single-player, multiplayer, and co-op modes let you tackle the mess alone or with others. If you like games that make no sense but somehow hold together, this is your jam.
Silivri’s gameplay is all over the place. You spend minutes driving around the city in stolen cars, then switch to tactical stealth during heists, followed by a sudden cutscene where an NPC monologues about their existential crisis. Missions vary wildly: one might have you laundering cash by running errands for a shady boss, while another forces you to betray a teammate for a laugh. Co-op play is a highlight but also a liability, friends can help or hijack your mission for comedic chaos. The city itself is a maze of nonsensical locations, from a laundromat that doubles as a black-market hub to a prison where inmates demand designer socks. Combat is light but tactical, requiring you to use the environment more than weapons. Controls are straightforward, but the game’s pacing leans on sudden shifts from mundane tasks to high-stakes nonsense, keeping sessions unpredictable.
PlayPile community ratings for Silivri average 88/100, with 72% of players completing the main story. Average playtime is 18 hours, though many get lost in side missions. Moods are split: 45% chaotic, 30% hilarious, 15% frustrating. Achievement data shows 120 total unlocks, with 65% of players hitting the 50% completion milestone. Reviews praise the game’s “wild ride” and “laugh-out-loud moments” but note inconsistent pacing. One user wrote, “Silivri is like a Tarantino movie directed by a sleep-deprived clown.” Critics on Metacritic give it a 78, calling it “ambitious but messy.” Co-op players love the shared absurdity, while solo gamers find it harder to navigate without a partner to offset the nonsense.
Silivri is a $39.99 gamble worth taking for fans of chaotic, joke-first design. It excels in co-op modes where the mayhem feels intentional, but solo play can drag during repetitive missions. The 120 achievements add replayability, though 40% of players never finish them. It’s not for those craving structure or polished mechanics, but if you’re okay with a game that prioritizes laughter over logic, it’s a standout. Stick with it past the first 10 hours, it gets weirder and more rewarding. Just don’t expect to leave with your sanity intact.
Complete all major missions to unlock the gates of Silivri. Deliver the clean laundry to the inmates inside… If the city doesn’t drive you insane first.
Game Modes
Single player, Multiplayer, Co-operative
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