Team Meat’s notoriously tough platformer is back on Steam for roughly one dollar, matching its lowest price in two years. The article breaks down why the discount matters, compares the deal to previous sales and to the sequel, and advises who should consider buying now.
Super Meat Boy hits Steam for about $1 – what the price means for platformer fans
Team Meat’s 2010 release Super Meat Boy returns to the Steam store at a price that barely covers a coffee. The current listing shows a $0.99 price tag, which is the same low point the game reached in the last 24 months according to SteamDB. The title is also Steam Deck verified, so the discount works for handheld gaming as well as desktop PCs.
What’s new in this sale?
- Price: $0.99 (regular price $14.99) – a 93 % discount.
- Verification: Steam Deck compatible, meaning the game runs smoothly on the portable device.
- Bundle option: The sequel Super Meat Boy Forever is also on sale, dropping from $4.99 to $0.69 (86 % off).
Caption: A gameplay screenshot from Super Meat Boy.
The discount brings the game back to the level it briefly hit during a 95 % flash sale in 2022, but it now stays at that price for an indefinite period, according to the store page.
How does it compare to the original launch and to the competition?
| Metric | Original launch (2010) | Current Steam price | Typical price of similar indie platformers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Retail price | $14.99 (Windows) | $0.99 | $9‑$15 (e.g., Celeste, Hollow Knight) |
| Steam rating | — | 90 % positive (37 k reviews) | 80‑95 % positive range |
| Metacritic | 90 (Critic) / 7.8 (User) | — | Similar titles sit around 85‑92 (Critic) |
The price puts Super Meat Boy well below the average for premium indie platformers, even when those titles are on sale. For reference, Celeste rarely drops below $5, and Hollow Knight hovers around $8 during major sales.
Who should click ‘Buy Now’?
- Speed‑run enthusiasts – the game’s short, repeatable levels are perfect for practice runs, and the $1 price removes any barrier to logging countless attempts.
- Steam Deck owners – the verification means you can take the frantic platforming on the go without fiddling with compatibility patches.
- Fans of high‑difficulty design – if you enjoy titles that punish every mistake but reward precision, Super Meat Boy’s 350‑plus levels provide endless material.
- Players looking for a taste before the sequel – the cheap price lets you gauge whether the mechanics appeal before investing in Super Meat Boy Forever, which is also heavily discounted.
If you prefer a more forgiving experience, the steep difficulty curve (frequent deaths, instant‑reset checkpoints) might feel more like a chore than a challenge. The community’s average user score of 7.8 reflects that split: critics love the design, while everyday players sometimes balk at the relentless frustration.
Technical notes for the Deck and PC
- CPU/GPU requirements – the game runs on a single‑core CPU at 1 GHz and needs only 256 MB of RAM. Even the original Steam Deck’s integrated graphics handle it at 60 fps.
- Control scheme – both keyboard/mouse and gamepad inputs are fully supported; the Deck’s built‑in controls map directly to the game’s tight button layout.
- Mod support – the community provides a few quality‑of‑life mods (e.g., checkpoint skips, visual tweaks) that can be installed via the Steam Workshop without breaking the core experience.
Bottom line
A $0.99 price tag for a title that still holds a 90 % positive rating on Steam is hard to ignore. The discount aligns Super Meat Boy with the lower end of the indie platformer market, making it an attractive entry point for both veterans and newcomers who can tolerate its brutal difficulty. Pair it with the equally cheap sequel, and you have a complete package for under $2.
Grab the deal while it lasts, especially if you own a Steam Deck – the verification ensures a smooth handheld session.
Sources: Steam Store page, SteamDB price history, Metacritic.

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