This blankness is the game's secret weapon. Because they have no personality, you project your own intentions onto them—whether that’s curiosity, frustration, or pure, unfiltered goblin energy. It’s the same reason people loved The Sims drowning pool memes, minus the $40 expansion packs. The physics engine is the true star. Everything has mass, density, and velocity. Blood splatters realistically. Limbs tear off with a satisfying pop . Fire spreads. Electricity arcs beautifully between coils. And because it’s a 2D game, the collisions have a cartoony, Wallace and Gromit -meets- Mortal Kombat vibe.
At first glance, it looks like a game designed by a chaotic gremlin for an audience of even gremlin-ier gremlins. And, well… you wouldn’t be entirely wrong. But beneath the surface-level pixelated gore and the faint smell of virtual ozone lies one of the most surprisingly deep physics sandboxes ever created. Developed by studio mzx, People Playground is a 2D ragdoll physics simulator with no goals, no scores, and no judgement. You are given a blank, gray room. You are given a toolbox filled with things like "human," "rope," "jet engine," "nuclear warhead," and "stasis field." Your only objective? Cause and effect.
You will laugh out loud when you accidentally attach a thruster to a man’s head and watch him spin into a wall like a defective helicopter. You will feel like a genius when your Rube Goldberg machine actually works for five seconds before exploding. Here’s the part that surprises most newcomers: People Playground isn’t really about violence. It’s about systems . The violence is just the most visible output. People Playground
Buy it. Break it. Learn from it. And for the love of all that is holy—don't forget to quicksave before you detonate the nuke.
9/10 – Would launch a man into the sun again. This blankness is the game's secret weapon
Hardcore players build working logic gates, clocks, and calculators using the game’s wires, triggers, and actuators. Others create serene “people playgrounds” where automatons walk endlessly on treadmills. Some just use it as a tool to understand how force, heat, and electricity interact in a low-stakes environment.
Want to see what happens when a person stands on a pressure plate that triggers a spike trap that releases a hot air balloon that drops an anvil? You can build that. Want to see if a human can survive being shot by 50 revolvers at once? Science demands you find out. Want to build a working mech suit out of thrusters, steel beams, and the blood of the innocent? Go for it. The “people” in People Playground are not realistic. They are noodly, slightly creepy, mute ragdolls with blank white eyes. They don't scream. They don't beg. They just stand there, passively waiting for you to either give them a gun or attach them to a rocket sled. The physics engine is the true star
If you’ve ever scrolled through Steam or YouTube, you’ve probably seen it: a muted, industrial-gray sandbox filled with faceless, mute, vaguely human-shaped figures getting hit by trains, zapped by lightning rods, or launched into orbit via explosive barrel.
Welcome to .