Steam launch: Immersive free-to-play sim hits Steam with very promising early reviews

A new free-to-play mechanic simulator has quietly launched on Steam with an unusually strong reception - Cheap Car Repair: Welcome to Nowhere is currently sitting at "Very Positive" with 159 user reviews, just two days after its May 11 release.
Developed by Little Dog Games and published by Simplicity Games and PlayWay S.A., the game takes you into a 1990s Polish village as a cash-strapped mechanic running a shady repair shop. The core gameplay loop involves cutting corners in increasingly creative - and dangerous - ways. Timing belt snapped? Pantyhose will do. Need an air filter? A sponge works fine. The game actively rewards getting away with shoddy repairs, but if a customer's car falls apart after leaving the garage, they'll be back - and not in a good mood.
Aside from the chaos in sandbox mode, there's also a story mode following John the Mechanic, who finds himself on the wrong side of a local businessman named Christopher Kingman. Side missions take you outside the garage and into the wider village, so you do get some narrative texture to what could otherwise be a pure sim.
Early reviewers are loving the strong atmosphere and a genuinely fun premise. There are definitely some optimization issues on mid-range hardware and clunky tool management - these are some areas that need work before a potential full release. One reviewer pointed out that the demo ran better than the current build - worth keeping in mind for anyone expecting a fully polished experience.
System requirements are quite accessible - you'll need at minimum a GTX 1060 or RX 580 with 8 GB of RAM, though 16 GB and an RTX 2070 or RX 5700 XT are recommended for smoother performance. Cheap Car Repair is free-to-play on Steam. Given the PlayWay pedigree and the early review momentum, it's one worth wishlisting even if you hold off on playing the current build.









