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15 Steam Next Fest demos you should play first this FebruaryWhere to get started with 2024’s first Steam Next Fest

Where to get started with 2024’s first Steam Next Fest

Image credit:Valve

Image credit:Valve

The Steam Next Fest logo for February 2024, set against a purple background

The firstSteam Next Festof 2024 is officially upon us, though this year there have been so many demos going live early that you may well haveplayedabunchofthemalready without even knowing it. Still, in case you need a helping hand cutting through the many hundreds, if not thousands of free demos that are currently jostling for your eyeballs on Steam, we’ve put together this shortlist of recommendations to get your started.

There are 15 picks here, covering everything from citybuilders to horror games - and a lot of these are games we’ve never written about before, either. But, in case you are looking for demos of more well-known PC games, we’ve also listed some of the big obvious choices you might want to check out as well (and all the other demos we’ve written about over the last couple of weeks). You know, because we’re nice like that. So come and join us for 15 (plus!) Next Fest demos to get you going.

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Below you’ll find our hand-picked recommendations from the team, which are all based on demos that we’ve been able to try in advance. You can viewthe full Next Fest line-uphere if you’d rather browse through the whole catalogue on Steam, but as with every one of these events, there are always loads of games that are worth trying beyond what we’ve listed here - including plenty of bigger names that we’ve covered extensively elsewhere on the site. For completeness sake, we’ve included those games below, with links to both things we’ve written about them and their respective Steam pages, so you can either read more about them or just go and check them out directly. The choice is yours. But if you’re looking for 15 games you likelyhaven’theard about before, then read on below for some fresh new indie picks.

Reus 2

Image credit:Firesquid

A mossy giant looks over a Japanese-inspired town in Reus 2

Edwin:I didn’t realise how much I’ve been yearning to play a god sim till I sat down withReus 2. God sims can be a very laidback genre, for all the talk of being all-seeing, all-knowing and all-meddling – gods are notorious for being absentee landlords, after all, whereas I’ve been playing a lot ofstrategy gamesandRPGslately that go heavy on the old micromanagement. Reus 2 is gloriously gentle, capturingBlack & Whiteat its most spaced-out. You’ve got a fully rotatable, 2D planet and three kindly giants to do your bidding. Care of these giants, you can turn sections of crust into biomes such as rainforest, ocean and desert, and place resources such as fruit trees and crystal deposits. Then you sit back to watch nascent humans scurry about foraging, raising towns, herding, or just cooling their heels in the surf.

That’s the early game, anyway. There’s a war component later, and a perfectionist alchemical undertow in the shape of combining specific believer communities with specific resources to produce a flourishing civilisation. But the machine of history only advances when your giants act, with historical time represented as purple points that add up into changes of era. Everything the little people do on the surface takes place in a blissful purgatory, and watching them go about their lives is a balm. Back in 2013, Alec Meer called the first Reus"my ideal screensaver". Here in the grim salvages of 2024, I nod my head in agreement.

Download thedemo on Steam right here.

Crow Country

Image credit:SFB Games

A horrible monster with long limbs chases a woman in Crow Country

Katharine:If you have a hankering for some oldeResident Evilspookings with chunky PS1-Final Fantasy VII-style characters to tank around in, get thyself toCrow Country, one of two upcoming games this year from the devs behindTangle Tower. You play Mara Forest as you investigate the mysterious disappearance of Edward Crow, the owner of the eponymous theme park, at said eponymous theme park. Only this isn’t a happy, haha fun times kind of joint anymore. This rundown maze of buildings is thick with a yellow-green smog, and not at all kosher trails of gibs and garbage bags strewn across the floor. Yes, something terrible clearly went down in this place, and it doesn’t take long for you to find out exactly what it is. Just mind your health bar, as you can only check on how you’re doing from within the menu screen. Just like the good old days, eh?

Download thedemo on Steam right here.

Duck Detective

Image credit:Happy Broccoli Games

A duck detective holds a book on a rainy pavement in Duck Detective

Alice Bee:I was expectingDuck Detectiveto be a cutesy, cartoonypuzzle game- and it is, indeed, that. As the Duck Detective, you investigate a charming and whimsical crime: an anthropomorphic animal is stealing the lunches of the other animals at the bus company they work at, right out of the office fridge. The Duck Detective gathers evidence from a scene and can then fit the right verbs and nouns in the right gaps of a deduction he’s written in his notebook (in a sort ofMy First Golden Idol). Some things he can look at in more detail, for more specific clues, like a calendar that can tell you what day it is and what events are coming up during the week.

The animation and art style is lovely, like a kid’s sticker book. But the little spike on this otherwise conventional volleyball is that the trope of a washed up, bitter private investigator is played extremely straight. The first thing the Duck Detective says, in a gravelly drawl, is that he’s a “freshly divorced duck” who can’t afford his rent. This is, to me, extremely conceptually funny. It’s like the “one human actor in a cast of Muppets” thing except the human is still also a Muppet, somehow. Excellent.

Download thedemo on Steam right here.

Death Of A Wish

Image credit:Syndicate Atomic

A young boy battles a large man in a cloak in Death Of A Wish

Download thedemo on Steam right here.

RAM: Random Access Mayhem

Image credit:Xylem Studios

Several robots battle it out on an industrial platform in RAM: Random Access Mayhem

Katharine:Keen-eyed readers will rememberRAM: Random Access Mayhemis one of this year’sIGF nomineesfor the best student game category, and cor, this top-down roguelikeshooteris quite something, lemme tell ya. With its twinstick controls and bevy of robot opponents to mow down, this is a fast-pacedaction gamethat doesn’t pull any punches. Then again, maybe youdowant to pull at least some of your punches here, as this is a game about mind-jumping from one robot shell to another rather than simply trying to stick with the same character you chose at the start. You see, each robot you come across will maybe only last a couple of rounds going toe to toe with other enemies, so you’ll need to think fast to keep yourself alive. Plus, because you’re an apparently rather sadistic form of AI, you’ll earn more points for destroying your old discard bodies in the flashiest way possible - such as an immediate shotgun to the face, or booting them off a cliff. Add in class-specific bot abilities and upgrades along the way and this has all the makings of the next great moreish roguelike. One to keep an eye on, for sure.

Download thedemo on Steam right here.

Spring Dash

Image credit:Dillon Steyl

The player is rushing through an aerial vortex in an abstract snowy landscape in Spring Dash

James:What ifNeon White, but with vegetable magic instead of gun cards? That’sSpring Dash, a first-person speedrunner that demands various feats of verdant wizardry to propel yourself through its dreamy floating obstacle courses. At first, that just means sprouting bouncy leaves to boing up walls and across chasms, but later additions of vine grappling and windy air dashes promise to make you the zippiest of zippy forest mages. Provided you put the effort in with them, anyway. Successfully zooming between islands is a great time, and there’s a nicely realised sense of momentum, but Spring Dash’s speedrunning is as unforgiving as it is fantastical. Still, there are regular checkpoints and retrying is instant, so it’s not fist-through-the-wall frustrating either.

Download thedemo on Steam right here.

Backpack Battles

Image credit:PlayWithFurcifer/IndieArk

Two hooded girls do battle with the items in their backpack in Backpack Battles

Download thedemo on Steam right here.

Mouthwashing

Image credit:Wrong Organ

A bandaged head emerges from the darkness with one eye and their mouth visible in Mouthwashing

Download thedemo on Steam right here.

Normal Fishing

Image credit:The Bworg

Two pixel people sit round a campfire near a lake in Normal Fishing

Download thedemo on Steam right here.

Berserk Boy

Image credit:BerserkBoy Games

A purple haired hero ziplines across a city in Berserk Boy

Katharine:It’s been a long time coming, but after years of(somewhat mysterious) turmoil, the fact-paced Mega Man-inspired platformerBerserk Boyis finally powering up for a full release. It’s coming quite soon - in just a few weeks' time, in fact - and its Next Fest demo lets you get to grips with some good old fashioned runnin' and gunnin' in its opening couple of levels. Itsplatformingmakes a strong first impression, too. Berserk Boy’s anime-inspired pixel visuals give our hero a well-defined silhouette as he zips across the screen dashing and zapping enemy robots, and the desire to collect every last energy orb quickly butts up against, well, simply staying alive amid the chaos of enemy projectiles, exploding missiles and everything else. Still, I was pleased to see two difficulty options present here: a more retro-focused limited number of lives affair, and a more modern and approachable ‘infinite restarts’ setting, too. I have no shame: I opted for the latter, and had a whale of a time.

Download thedemo on Steam right here.

Antipaint

Image credit:Vilius Prakapas

Several coloured blocks with eyes rush around a canvas in Antipaint

James:Antipaintis a roguelite twin-stick shooter where the battlefield is your canvas. Vanquished blobs of paint explode into streaks, splats, and Cubist patterns, with each completed stage leaving a finished artwork you can view later. All your creations are given names, too – I think The Horrendous Vibe will become my most famous work, even if my real opus is The Absolute Computer. The bosses, meanwhile, are a gang of angry (and conveniently public domain) portraits from the annals of painting legend. I got past the Mona Lisa without much trouble, though Napoleon Crossing The Alps kicked my head in. Daft? Yes. Butfunnydaft.

Download thedemo on Steam right here.

Raw Metal

Image credit:Team Crucible

A miner sneaks up on a miner bot in the dark in Raw Metal

Edwin:“Metal Gear Raw, morelike!” he brilliantly quips, except that this isn’t just astealth game, Edwin, you perfect dolt. It’s also a fairly technical beat-em up. InRaw Metalyou’re a rangy scavenger infiltrating an exoplanetary mining facility, made up of dungeon floors full of baton-wielding guards. You must rove the shadows in top-down view, using noisemakers to lure people off and shattering light fittings with darts, Thief-style. Don’t worry too much if you’re caught, however, because Raw Metal is possibly more fun as a brawler. The bread-and-butter basics are light and heavy punches and kicks, a parry and a dodge – more advanced techniques include wall slams, slides and gadgetry such as electric traps. I get an ever-so-slight Absolver vibe despite the starkly shaded aesthetics. There’s a similar crispness to the combat animations.

Download thedemo on Steam right here.

Abiotic Factor

Image credit:Playstack

A scientist prods a reptile-alien creature with a sharp pole, while the player prepares to snare it in a net inside an office setting in Abiotic Factor

Alice0:Whilesurvival gamesare not usually my genre, I am smitten with the premise ofAbiotic Factor: what if you were a regular Black Mesa employee when everything went wrong? Not a nascent superhero like Gordon Freeman, just a regular old employee, the type who’s only good for screaming, opening doors, and vanishing into vents before being spat out as a shower of gibs. How would you survive in your workplace when another dimension comes calling? You can find out in this non-copyright-infringing research facility in Australia. You (and optionally your pals in onlineco-op) will sneak about, craft tools and weird gadgets, cook food, build bases, attempt to bash baddies as best a nerd can, lay traps, feast from vending machines, crawl through vents, and so on, all within the sprawl of a place which is definitely not Black Mesa. It’s delightful and makes me wish I had pals who played survival games.

Download thedemo on Steam right here.

Botany Manor

Image credit:Whitethorn Games

A huge glass house surrounded by trees and plants in Botany Manor

Download thedemo on Steam right here.

Synergy

Image credit:Goblinz Publishing

A flourishing settlement near a green pool of water in Synergy

Katharine:What if Frostpunk looked like a Moebius painting and was set during an apocalyptic drought instead of a future ice age? Well, it would probably look a lot likeSynergy, a game whose terrible name hides what is actually a very cool and engaging citybuilder. It’s also a lot more laidback than Frostpunk, ditching the moral quandaries of child labour and using hospitals to experiment on some, err, less than savoury workarounds for your dwindling food supplies, and just letting you get on withbuildinga functioning little caravan. Houses need to be in range of food tents, hospitals and warehouses, for example, and some citizens need to be kept free so they can courier supplies to new building locations. At times, you can almost forget it’s set during a full-on climate crisis! Though the demo tutorial does also give you the benefit of several temperate seasons in a row, rather than chuck sizzling heatwaves at you to really test how much clean water you’ve been saving. Still, lots of promising stuff here, especially if the thought of more grim decisions to make inFrostpunk 2gives you the shivers.

Download thedemo on Steam right here.