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Devil Jam

Released: 11/3/2025

Critics
70
vs
Users
73

Score Breakdown

70.0

Critic Average

10 reviews

73

Steam User Score

94 reviews

N/A

Metacritic User Score

Disparity Breakdown

Steam Disparity
-3.4

70 vs 73

Metacritic Disparity
N/A
Combined Disparity
-3.4

Average of both sources

Review Disparities

Positive = critic higher than usersNegative = critic lower than users

Each point represents a critic review. Hover for details. Positive = critic higher than users. Negative = critic lower.

11/22/2025

Launch Window

Devil Jam is a compelling, stylish foundation with a standout core loop that’s best experienced in short bursts today. With expanded content, tighter balance, and a few quality‑of‑life changes around the grid and progression, it has clear potential to climb higher; it’s worth bookmarking or wishlisting for future updates.

75

75/100

Read

11/10/2025

Launch Window

Despite a good idea, Devil Jam doesn't reach its potential. Repetitive in every aspect, the controller quickly falls out of your hands.

55

55/100

Read

11/3/2025

Launch Window

After signing a deal with the Devil, the protagonist of Devil Jam is cast into the underworld to perform his gig over and over again. For eternity. Whilst this was the story I was presented and expected to follow on from this, I did find the story offering to be somewhat lacklustre. Whilst not an essential part of survivor-like rogue-likes, when presented with the premise of a story, I would have enjoyed seeing it expanded.

70

70/100

Read

11/3/2025

Launch Window

Devil Jam has a great premise, fantastic art, and a fun mechanical twist on the survivors-like genre. However, it feels unfinished, providing not a whole lot of content and making players grind pretty hard to get what is there. Mechanically and narratively light, the game would be in a great spot for an Early Access release, but short of a full launch.

60

60/100

Read

11/2/2025

Early Review

The game has fantastic artwork, from the sins to the demons, everything is visually striking. Even the scenery, though simple, with its earthy, bluish ground, has personality. The problem is that there seems to be only one level, sustained by the same music and with a huge variation in available abilities. In the end, Devil Jam leaves the feeling of a game with great potential that fell short.

70

70/100

Read

11/2/2025

Early Review

In whole, Devil Jam is an addictively fun game that just runs its course with a single map and a few bosses. I would love to see the team at Rougeside build on this incredibly solid foundation, as I couldn’t stop diving in and having a quick run with different characters. Rock out devilishly.

75

75/100

Read

10/31/2025

Early Review

Devil Jam is a curious experience. Like one of those catchy songs we hear on the radio every day, it manages to entertain and captivate us, but invariably, we end up with the feeling that it could have been much better.

70

70/100

Read

10/31/2025

Early Review

Devil Jam is a solid player in survivors-like games, and I think most players who enjoy them will want to give it a play. I even see a chance at this game drawing in from the music crowd, especially because of the rhythm-like mechanics. It is a fun, rewarding play loop that has the air of addictiveness to it. It’s a great game to spend time on, and the increasing difficulty scale keeps it somewhat different as you progress.

80

80/100

Read

10/31/2025

Early Review

Devil Jam enters an already crowded arena of “Survivor” roguelikes and auto-battlers, but struggles to carve out a lasting identity. While its beat-driven combat and metal-inspired aesthetic offer a fresh twist, the lack of stage variety, limited boss roster, and underwhelming progression system make it hard to stay invested beyond a few runs. The single looping arena and sparse backstage hub contribute to a sense of repetition, and without meaningful unlocks or evolving challenges, replayability suffers. In a genre overflowing with inventive alternatives, Devil Jam feels more like a novelty than a staple – fun in short bursts, but unlikely to hold attention for long.

65

65/100

Read

10/31/2025

Early Review

A presentation reminiscent of Hades is the cherry on top of Devil Jam, a Survivors-like brought to life with metal music and a beat that will keep you headbanging from start to finish. Only the bosses are going to get in the way of your fun here, but you're absolutely going to want to keep trying to best them.

80

80/100

Read