Tiny teams and silly ideas keep paying off. RV There Yet?, a four-player physics co-op about driving a beleaguered RV across brutal countryside, surged onto Steam’s best-sellers chart after reaching a peak of over 100,000 concurrent players.
The core loop is gloriously dumb in the best way: one player tries to drive the hulking RV while teammates build makeshift ramps, haul the chassis with a winch, and patch damage between runs. There are resource bits, too, food, antidotes, the odd EpiPen, so, in practice, the team alternates between mechanical chaos and mild panic. It started life as a small game jam project and quickly turned into a full release.
The game’s Steam store page lays out the premise and tone, and the developer wrote in a short blog post that the project began as a jam entry this summer before expanding into a complete game in a matter of months. Planned polish includes keybindings, full controller support, localization, achievements, and a Steam Deck Verified badge.
Context matters here. Steam is enormous, and single titles hitting big peaks still stand out, the platform recently topped multiple million-user milestones, showing how noisy the storefront can be. For perspective on Steam’s overall scale, see our look at the platform’s concurrent user peaks here.
This kind of co-op success is a reminder that fun trumps polish when friends are involved. RV There Yet? leans into chaotic physics and social play, which makes it easy to jump in for one frantic run or to sink hours into repeated attempts. It’s the kind of lunchbreak chaos that streams well and spreads fast among groups of players.
If you want to try it with pals, the SteamDB chart is a quick way to watch current activity, and the Steam store page has platform and feature notes.
Want to share your funniest RV fail or a screenshot of a miraculous rescue? Sound off below, and follow our feeds on X, Bluesky, YouTube.















