RV There Yet? Review – Chaotic Co-op Winch Comedy
A goofy, physics-driven co-op about hauling an RV home with friends. Brilliantly funny when it works, frustratingly janky at times — best enjoyed with beers, bad driving and a solid group chat.
RV There Yet? is the kind of indie multiplayer that turns a simple drive into a friendship endurance test. Think Get Over It meets a tipsy road trip — the charm comes from the jank as much as the design.

You and up to three mates cram into a single RV and try to negotiate one increasingly ridiculous map full of gaps, bears, snakes and physics puzzles. The core loop is cooperative problem solving: place planks, rig front and rear winches, anchor poles and literally winch your way across obstacles while someone drives. Proximity chat and online co‑op make the shouting and tactical betrayal feel organic — yelling at your teammate to “stop reversing!” is half the fun. There are silly lifestyle bits (grill frozen patties, smoke cigarettes, wear hats) that add flavor but not depth. The winch physics are the star: mastering them is oddly satisfying, though they can also clip, stick or outright betray you in dramatic ways. Performance and bugs pop up: stuck winch lines, weird clipping and occasional crashes were frequent in my sessions. Content is focused — one main map (plus a free second map added post-launch) — so it’s compact rather than sprawling. Replay value comes from chaos and group dynamics more than polished systems; this is a social party game first, a simulation second.

RV There Yet? is a compact, funny co‑op with a brilliant core idea: winch your friendships to the brink and back. Buy it for group nights and laughs, but be prepared for jank and a short ride.








Pros
- Genuinely hilarious co-op moments that create lasting memories.
- Satisfying winch-and-physics gameplay that rewards creative teamwork.
- Cheap, compact and perfect for short multiplayer sessions.
Cons
- Jank and bugs can turn fun into frustration (winch/clip issues, occasional crashes).
- Limited content — one main map with only a small amount of variety.
Player Opinion
Players love the ridiculous moments — laughter, trolling and the emergent stories you get when physics go sideways. Many praise the social fun and say it’s worth the low price, especially with friends or dedicated voice chat. Common complaints are bugs, finicky driving/gear shifting, and a feeling that parts of the game are underpolished or short on content. If you like chaotic party co‑ops like PEAK or Lethal Company for the shared insanity, you’ll probably enjoy this.




