Quick snapshot
Struggle is an intense zero-gravity action-survival title that tests reflexes and patience. Players are equipped with a hatchet, a chain, and a fire extinguisher as they push off and grapple through drifting wreckage, piecing together what happened to a vanished crew. The presentation is deliberately sparse, with precise movement and uncluttered visuals that heighten tension and demand skill.
Movement and core mechanics
Momentum is the heart of the experience. Every shove, latch, and boost alters your trajectory, so control and timing matter more than raw speed. Debris becomes both pathway and hazard — you use it to propel yourself, anchor against the void, or change direction. Scattered audio logs provide clues to the narrative while level layouts reward measured play and careful planning.
Visuals, sound and tone
The game leans into minimalist aesthetics and realistic physics to create an isolated, oppressive atmosphere. Sound design focuses on sparse, environmental cues and voice fragments that slowly reveal the backstory. Together, these elements produce a tense, contemplative mood that complements the mechanical challenge.
Who should play
This is best suited to players who enjoy precision platforming, tight controls, and mechanical mastery. If you like speedrunning, methodical problem-solving, or storytelling told through environment and audio breadcrumbs, you’ll find a lot to appreciate. Casual players looking for a forgiving experience may find it frustrating, particularly because checkpoints are scarce.
Key strengths and drawbacks
- Extremely rewarding for players who value mechanical skill and precision.
- Sparse checkpointing and high difficulty can feel punishing.
- Clean, immersive visuals and focused sound design enhance immersion.
- May discourage casual or completion-focused players due to unforgiving sections.
- Level design and physics-based traversal offer rich opportunities for speedruns.
- Narrative is delivered in small pieces via audio logs, which won’t satisfy everyone.
A free alternative to try
If you want a no-cost option with similar zero-g experience, try a free survival title that removes gravity and emphasizes improvisation with found objects. It won’t be identical, but it captures the feel of drifting through debris and managing momentum without the initial purchase barrier.
Technical
- Windows
- English
- Spanish
- Full