
EpiXR Games is an independent game development studio and game publisher that was founded in May 2019. We strive to create impactful, entertaining, and exciting game experiences for PC and console and are also happy to help other indie developers bring their games to Xbox, PlayStation, and Nintendo Switch.
EpiXR Games started its operations in May 2019 and has since released a significant volume of titles. The company lists 48 total games on PlayPile, with 46 entries as a publisher and 32 as a developer. Their catalog grew quickly from just two releases in the 2010s to 46 games in the 2020s, showing a clear shift toward high-volume output in the last few years. The studio focuses heavily on indie titles, with 34 games fitting that category. They also lean into simulators and adventure games, with 34 and 29 releases respectively. Arcade and puzzle games round out their main genres, though they have dipped into shooters, racing, sports, RPGs, and card games as well. Their platform strategy targets a wide range of systems. Nintendo Switch is their primary target with 38 games, followed closely by PC with 35 titles. PlayStation 4 and Xbox One also see strong support with 28 and 27 releases each. They have begun expanding to next-gen consoles like PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S, but those numbers remain much smaller at 10 and 4 games respectively. The company bio states they aim to help other indie developers bring their work to these major platforms, which aligns with their heavy publishing role compared to their developer count. The critical reception for EpiXR Games is not impressive based on available data. They have only one rated title on the platform, Aery from 2019, which holds a score of 50 out of 100. This single entry falls into the mixed rating category. There are no titles rated as great or good in the current dataset, and the average IGDB rating across their single rated game sits at 50/100. Recent releases scheduled for 2025 and 2026 include Sora: Winds of the Jungle, Windborn: Echoes of the Night, Death Frame, Gang Wars: Cards and Bullets, and Zumba: Treasure of the Marble Sea. These upcoming titles continue their pattern of diverse genres but offer no immediate indication of a shift in critical quality given the lack of historical high scores.















































