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Ultra Damage is a chaotic PC-exclusive shooter from Sons of Welder, dropping you into a bizarre world where detective work meets over-the-top violence. Released in 2026, it blends hand-drawn visuals with rapid-fire combat and a storyline that jumps from noir intrigue to slapstick absurdity. The single-player campaign tasks you with solving a mystery that somehow involves alien conspiracies and sentient appliances. Think fast, shoot faster, and expect the unexpected. The game’s charm lies in its mismatched tone, gritty clues mixed with cartoonish explosions. If you like your action games with a side of weird, this one’s your speed.
You play a detective armed with a ridiculous arsenal, sprinting through levels filled with puzzles, enemies, and environmental gags. Combat is straightforward: point, click, and spam bullets. But you’ll also backtrack to find hidden notes, decode cryptic messages, and trigger traps. Each level feels like a self-contained story, shifting from a haunted office building to a moonbase sauna. The controls are tight, with quick reloads and smooth aiming, but the real hook is the escalating absurdity of the missions. You’ll spend 30 seconds fighting a robot and the next minute solving a riddle about existential philosophy. The challenge scales steadily, with later levels requiring precise shooting and timing.
PlayPile users rate it 92% with 12,345 reviews. Average playtime is 8.5 hours, and 68% of players finish the main story. Community moods are split between excited (42%) and amused (37%), with some mild frustration (13%). One review calls it “ridiculous fun with a killer soundtrack,” while another gripes about “uneven pacing.” Achievement completion stands at 78%, with 43% unlocking the “Ultra Damage” title by blowing up everything in a level. Critics praise the visuals but note the story’s “whiplash tone shifts.” The 12-hour max playtime for 100% completion makes it a quick burn for most.
Ultra Damage is a $29.99 splurge for fans of quirky shooters who don’t mind a bumpy ride. It shines in short bursts, with replay value mostly in collecting all 142 achievements. Skip if you prefer methodical stories or polished mechanics. But if you like goofy dialogue, explosive set pieces, and a game that never takes itself seriously, it’s worth the price. Just don’t expect a cohesive mystery, this is all about the chaos.
Game Modes
Single player
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