Two games hit Steam on May 1st. One’s a five-dollar adrenaline shot with zero concurrent players. The other is a 31-year-old fighting game with rollback netcode and a community already lobbying for more.

DOSTAVKA comes from Russian solo developer SASHADEV — a first-person parkour platformer where the floor is lava. The ClusterTruck and SuperHot comparisons hold up. Steam shows 88% positive from 8 reviews; Raijin.gg tracks 97% across 33, likely pulling from the game’s early access period that began in July 2025. At $4.99, it’s impulse territory.

Players say the levels hit a sweet spot between rage-quit and one-more-try. One reviewer called it “knockoff clustertrucks” but still gave it a thumbs up, adding you should “grab it on sale for a bucks.” Zero concurrent players at time of writing is a rough look for a game that just officially launched, but for a cheap single-player platformer, you’re buying a few hours of kinetic frustration — and by most accounts, you’ll get exactly that.

World Heroes Perfect is the standout. Code Mystics delivers another immaculate SNK retro port, bringing the 1995 arcade fighter to Steam with rollback netcode, nine-player lobbies, practice mode with hitbox display, and all 19 characters including hidden boss Zeus, who was only playable in select previous releases. According to SNK, tournament mode supports single elimination, double elimination, and round robin formats. Launch discount sits at $14.99, down from $19.99.

Only two Steam reviews so far, but they’re pure signal. “Love these classic SNK games. We want MORE!” reads one. The other bought it to “support Code Mystics excellent port, netcode, and player rooms.” This is a community that knows retro reissues are a vote-with-your-wallet proposition. Twenty concurrent players for a 1995 fighter isn’t a scene, but it’s a heartbeat.

The call: DOSTAVKA is a cheap fix for platformer junkies who’ve played everything else. World Heroes Perfect is the one worth full price — even if you never enter a ranked match.

Sources