
For players weary of cookie-cutter cooperative shooters, Abyssus arrives as a brinepunk breath of fresh air. Developed by DoubleMoose—a studio whose alumni include key contributors to Goat Simulator and Coffee Stain titles—this FPS roguelite promises a mix of deep weapon customisation, underwater civilization lore and social features like sea shanty celebrations. We put the Next Fest demo through its paces to see if Abyssus can truly stand apart from its heavyweights like Deep Rock Galactic, Vermintide and Gunfire Reborn, or if it risks drowning in the genre’s familiar pitfalls.
Abyssus positions itself as a fast-paced shooter with roguelite progression. In the demo, weapons handled with surprising weight—shots felt impactful, and even basic pistol play rewarded headshots with satisfying feedback. DoubleMoose’s lead designer, Sofia Petrov, told us, “We wanted each encounter to feel like a remix: fluid, tense and uniquely brinepunk.” That ambition shows in arenas littered with rusted pipes and bioluminescent growths, where squads of up to four players must coordinate to avoid being overrun.
Alongside standard loadouts, the highlight is the “Tesla Gun,” which demo players unlocked mid-run. The primary fire lobs electricity arcs, while the secondary mod leaps between up to five enemies—great for crowd control. Our playtests averaged two minutes of downtime between waves, though some testers reported occasional enemy pathfinding issues at high difficulty, hinting at polish needed before launch.
While the depth rivals that of Gunfire Reborn, some testers warned that without diverse enemy types or level modifiers, builds may feel repetitive after dozens of hours—something we’ll monitor in the full release.

The Next Fest demo showcased two distinct environments:
Developer stats reveal the full game will include five unique zones at launch. Community feedback on the Steam forum praised atmosphere but noted that map layouts felt “a bit linear” in the demo—DoubleMoose says this is deliberate for pacing, but players are eager for more sandbox-style exploration.
More than mere cosmetics, Abyssus injects lighthearted social moments into the firefight. Unlockable “sea shanties” let your squad belt out tunes upon extraction. Early demo stats show that 78% of players triggered at least one group song during their runs—a sign that these small features can drive camaraderie and meme-worthy clips on Discord.

Leaderboards and post-run score screens emphasise both individual flair and team efficiency. A veteran tester noted, “It’s not about who gets the most kills, but who triggers the most combo mods with the team.” This approach could foster community-driven challenges, but it remains to be seen if endgame incentives—seasonal events, challenge modes—will keep squads logging back in.
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No amount of brinepunk flair can mask a lack of content. Our concerns include:
We tested the demo on a mid-range PC (Ryzen 5 5600X, RTX 3060) and observed stable 60–75 FPS at 1080p with high settings. However, on some community machines below a GTX 1050 level, frame dips into the high-40s occurred in heavy particle scenarios—DoubleMoose’s technical director, Marcus Lee, assures us an optimization patch is in the works to support lower-end rigs. VRAM spikes were also reported when multiple players deployed flame or electric effects simultaneously.

Steam forum threads and social channels have trended positively, with players praising the aesthetic and build depth. Criticisms focus on UI clarity—inventory screens felt cluttered—and the lack of a traditional minimap. DoubleMoose has opened a public Trello board for suggestions and plans biweekly developer updates leading up to the August 12, 2025 launch.
Abyssus shows strong potential to carve out its own niche in a crowded co-op shooter market. Its brinepunk setting, comprehensive weapon modding and social touches like sea shanties bring originality. Yet the long-term success depends on adding variety to biomes, expanding the enemy roster, and delivering robust endgame content. If DoubleMoose follows through with optimization and community-driven balances, Abyssus could become the next go-to title for late-night sessions with friends—and maybe even inspire a few choruses of bone-shaking sea shanties along the way.