One of the biggest surprises on Steam this March was Retro Rewind – Video Store Simulator, a management game harking back to the golden age of Blockbuster. The indie game, which was developed by two people in Canada, recently celebrated its 100,000 copies sold milestone, a figure that immediately catapults it into a rare echelon of successful Steam games. Even now, amid Steam’s Spring Sale, the lighthearted simulator sits comfortably between games like Resident Evil Requiem and Marathon on the PC storefront’s top sellers.
Retro Rewind came out on March 17. Just a week before, though, another game had a similar value proposition for Steam users. Rewind 99, originally released on March 11, is also a game about running a VHS rental store. There are differences between Retro Rewind and Rewind 99, of course. The latter, which is still in early access, is a sillier, boisterous action game with RPG elements where players can progressively unlock better powers and abilities.
Like Retro Rewind, there are some management elements here, like ordering provisions, stocking shelves, and dealing with customers. But Rewind 99‘s scope is larger than that of Retro Rewind, as players can explore a city and interact with NPCs living out their daily lives. And finally, the initial management game also offers co-op. A Rewind 99 developer has described the game as “the open world of Schedule I meets the store manager simulator of TCG card shop simulator.” Another way of looking at this is that, if Retro Rewind appeals to the sort of nostalgia that works for an IP like Stranger Things, Rewind 99 instead speaks more to folks who like comical games, like Peak.
Rewind 99 performed decently on Steam. It has a few hundred reviews on the platform and its overall rating is “very positive.” Around half of all the releases on Steam don’t even get a dozen reviews! According to SteamDB, Rewind 99 also achieved a respectable player count high of around 1,100 concurrent players.
Retro Rewind, however, has blown its competitor out of the water. As of this writing, there are 4,500 people actively playing the Steam game with a more defined focus. Retro Rewind managed to break into the mainstream, with sites like The Hollywood Reporter and Popular Science covering its existence. That’s in addition to Retro Rewind‘s popularity with both YouTubers and Twitch streamers.




