
Easily Delivery Co. is by indie dev Sam C, who lives out there in Toronto of that there Canada. This is a glorious little delivery game, with a chilled vibe, chilly setting, and fantastic original PlayStation blocky polygon graphics style.
Whilst not demanding on a gameplay front, what you do get instead is a chance to deliver some stuff to customers, earn cash, upgrade your gear, and all that jazz. It’s out RIGHT NOW on Steam.
Cats, Kei Trucks, and Mysteries Abound in Easy Delivery Co.
There’s a similar vibe going on here to the excellent A Short Hike (2019), but with reversed graphics and a frozen setting compared to a beach.
The goal here is to take control of your cat-like character and then start completing deliveries. You’ve just started working for Easy Delivery Co., a big business that doesn’t give much of a toss for its lowly employees (oh, how unlike real life!).
Your early deliveries are pretty easy, but then you begin to explore the bigger, wider, snow drenched world and this relentless inhospitable environment… and that’s when you start to discover secrets! Mainly with how the locals lead their life and other stuff like that.
So there’s kind of an existential dread to proceedings, all whilst playing out to the more relaxed cosy game vibe. An interesting hybrid of genres that works well. Part relaxing, part mildly horrifying.
Here’s a gameplay loop in action.
There’s a definite perils of hyper capitalism Cloudpunk (2020) feel, too. That’s another brilliant game where you tour around a busy, yet desolate, location and deliver goods.
You enter these worlds aware they now reflect modern life, but the difference here is you get to fly a hover car (Cloudpunk) and here a truck as a CAT thing. And that’s fantabulous.
However, we’ve seen one professional reviewer refer to the game as Lynchian, as in the style of David Lynch films. And that is there with the existential element (and the relentless bleak weather).
It looks fab! Has buckets of atmosphere. And there’s a bleepy, bloopy retro score by Sohaoying to go with delivery proceedings. This drifts between occasional fast-paced dance numbers to chillout ambiance like this beauty.
All of which adds to the mysterious, frozen world Easy Delivery Co. delivers so well. It’s one of the things we love about indie games, the fact it’s been designed to look like this.
What many gamers would call “shit” graphics and, yet, here we are with another glorious title.
It’s relaxing. It’s engaging. It’s packed with a surprising array of hidden depths, but it’s also something of a simulation game (see our Bus Driver Simulator review for more on that genre). You actively engage in a day job, of sorts, and make mundane deliveries in a location plagued with awful weather. All for the joys of below minimum wage.
But it’s totally worth your time. One of 2025’s hidden gem indie titles, which also includes a POV driving mode in all that sludge and snow. It’s very good indeed.
