Space Warlord Organ Trading Simulator Is Exactly What It Says It Is. It’s Also Great.

Space Warlord Organ Trading Simulator is not a game that really messes around, as its title suggests. In fact, It’s one of the straightest shooters of the year, and all the better for that. It’s a fantastic, near-perfect distillation of systems grinding against each other laid mostly bare and filled in with flavor text that complements the game’s themes and earns its laughs while you frantically dart all over its screens buying and selling organs.
Strange Scaffold, the studio behind Space Warlord Organ Trading Simulator and An Airport for Aliens Currently Run by Dogs, has now built what I hope is the seedier side of the same game universe, where black market dealers sell the organs of aliens and some people in the service of reputation and wealth. That’s really about it. It’s a baffling honesty that I admire as it extends to every aspect of the game, communicating very plainly to the audience what it’s about and how to navigate it all.
Presented in a series of stylized but simple menus, Trading Simulator is exactly what it bills itself as. As a part of the simulation, you are not the only organ-trading space warlord, and before long you’re competing in a marketplace with all the other weirdos who fall into this kind of work. Trust me: there are a bunch. While you and a “kajillionaire” dog named Chad Shakespeare (who isn’t legally a dog, apparently) duke it out in the marketplace, you’re also lining up deals with buyers and scammers to make your profits go up. Nowhere will you see a more infuriating and tense confrontation in games this year than playing Trading Simulator on a day where you, a dog, a robot that seemingly killed its predecessor, and some dude named Marcus are all vying for the same five organs.
You can also use your wealth to buy off traders so that they don’t swoop in on your trading, buy cargo space to hold more organs, and also trade on the stock market, which doesn’t track companies but the value of organs. A rudimentary knowledge of stocks will provide everything you need to know to make it work in your favor, but the game is kind enough to gesture at you if you don’t. Dynamic “organ barges” occur every few days where one or two organs will absolutely flood the market, halting your progress on whatever demands you were looking to fulfill and causing their accompanying stock to plummet. Sometimes these are announced ahead of time, allowing you to plan, and other times you’re all caught off guard by the sudden rush of eyeballs or spleens everywhere. On other occasions, some cultists might get caught by the cops, jacking up the prices of robot shards in real time. It’s fun watching the world’s goofiest market react to things like they would in real life, and these wrenches that get thrown in help teach the game without over-tutorialization by encouraging a wider profile of investments rather than specializing in one or two organs. Now I’m just waiting with bated breath for the future CEO who reveals in a profile that he acquired his business acumen playing Space Warlord Organ Trading Simulator.
Can we talk about the whole organ trading part of this game? It’s remarkable how quickly I surrendered myself over to the premise of being a bad person, someone actively commodifying the deaths of countless others by hawking off their parts, when it was made so easy. All the game boils down to is clicking buttons that buy literal bits of people and sell them back to others, and yet for as immoral as that is… it feels good? It’s a testament not just to the strength of the designers but also the writers’ comedic chops that these aspects pair well enough to disarm you and lure you into what it’s selling. No part of the writing is cruel, instead leaning fully into the absurd. Characters are named things like Chad Shakespeare or HYPE EMPEROR GOLDSTAR, while clients scream about hating their feelings and request a new brain in order to stop feeling them, for example. This kind of satire works as a solid exploration of the game’s themes because when hasn’t capitalism outdone itself and sunk to a new low in order to justify itself? When isn’t it bordering on ridiculous? We have a metaverse now, for fuck’s sake. We eat these satires up too, from Arrested Development to Succession! The worst people imaginable engaging in the worst possible system, thereby revealing its flaws and giving us something to point at and mock is basically a widely cherished pastime by now. So why wouldn’t it work as a game where you are the cog in the worst possible version of our current broken system? That’s just good sci-fi right there.