
It starts simple: you, a beat-up RV, a group of “responsible” adults, and a dream to make it home alive.
It ends with your van on fire, your best friend screaming about bears, and someone winching the wrong tree again.
Welcome to RV There Yet?, the most chaotic co-op road trip since Human: Fall Flat met Overcooked and decided to smoke a cigarette before rolling down a mountain.
RV There Yet? is a physics-based co-op driving game where up to four players try to navigate a rickety RV through rough terrain, bad luck, and worse decision-making.
You and your friends are basically a bunch of middle-aged road trippers - chain-smoking, chugging beers, and screaming “GAS IT!” while the RV tumbles into a ravine.
Sounds dumb?
It is. But it’s also brilliant.
It’s a game about teamwork, but not the polished kind. The “we accidentally detached the winch and now Todd’s under the bus again” kind.
Every action, every turn, every bump in the road has its own physics, meaning everything can go wrong and usually does.

The mission? Drive through the wilderness and get home.
The problem? You and your friends can barely drive straight.
Each player takes a role:
There are cliffs, forests, floods, and wild animals that do not care about your insurance policy.

It’s the perfect chaos game. The kind you boot up with friends for “just 30 minutes” and suddenly it’s 3AM and your group chat is full of clips of you screaming at trees.
There’s something magic in its simplicity. You’re not saving the world. You’re not grinding XP. You’re just trying to move one stubborn, physics-driven hunk of metal a few hundred meters uphill without dying of laughter.
The fact that it started as a tiny game jam project makes it even better - it feels handmade, messy, and full of soul. Like someone duct-taped an idea together and somehow made it genius.
The community has already crowned this game the new co-op cult classic.
Steam reviews are full of things like:
10/10. We flipped the RV, caught on fire, got attacked by a bear, and I’ve never laughed harder.
I accidentally winched my friend into a lake. We’re still not talking.
It’s that kind of fun - unhinged, unscripted, unforgettable.
And it’s not just the players. Big gaming outlets are losing it too: PC Gamer called it “a silly co-op masterpiece,” and GamesRadar said it “hit 100,000 players in a weekend” - not bad for a game about driving drunk dads through a forest.
If you love pure chaos, friendship-testing moments, and games that make you laugh more than they make sense, absolutely yes.
If you want polish, a long story, or serious gameplay - maybe not yet. It’s janky, but that’s part of the charm.
Grab a few friends, jump in voice chat, and prepare to scream. And if you’re already planning your next disastrous road trip, you know where the gas is cheapest -> Kinguin.
You bring the friends, we’ll bring the keys 🚐💨
We've got our finger on the pulse