Number six on Steam’s Top Sellers chart. Not a long-awaited sequel, not a live-service juggernaut with a nine-figure budget — a $5 casual golf game where you can bazooka your friends before they sink a putt.

Super Battle Golf, developed by Brimstone and published by Oro Interactive, sits at #6 on both the Top Sellers and Specials charts as of April 2026, nestled among titles that cost a hundred times more to make. The math is blunt: 4,787 reviews, 95% positive, 5,468 concurrent players, and over one million copies sold in under six weeks since its February 19 launch.

The pitch is almost too simple. Up to eight players on a course at the same time — no turns, no waiting. Everyone races to the hole while firing lasers, ramming golf carts, and lobbing explosives at anyone who looks like they’re about to birdie. One Steam reviewer nailed the vibe with 4.5 hours logged: “It’s proper etiquette to yell ‘Fore!’ before you bazooka someone to smithereens.” Another offered a more concise three-word summary: “Ball go Boom.”

The game is currently 30% off at $5.59 through April 14, which certainly helps its chart position. But discounts don’t explain a 95% rating from nearly 4,800 players — that’s execution, not pricing.

Brimstone isn’t slowing down. The Frozen Fairway update drops April 9, adding 18 new holes across snow and coast biomes, wind mechanics, a Rocket Driver item that lets you charge swings to 200% power (or accidentally launch yourself), and a Freeze Bomb that turns water into temporary platforms. The timing isn’t accidental — The Masters starts the same day.

The lesson isn’t complicated. Build something fun, price it fairly, and let players hit each other with rockets on a putting green. Turns out that’s enough to hang with the big budgets.

Sources