Mars First Logistics, released last week into Early Access on Steam, is a game with a very simple setup. You are driving little robot vehicles around the surface of Mars, doing jobs for people, and those jobs involve you having to build your own cars (or whatever else!) in a way that gets the job done.
Letâs say you get a contract where you need to take a steel beam from one little Martian base to another. You open up a lovely little building screenâone that is very reminiscent of LEGO instruction manualsâand, from a limited selection of parts, get building. Youâll need something to hold the steel, that ideally can also carry it across the surface of Mars, and youâll also need something to reposition the steel when you get there for delivery.
So you do thatâor at least something you think will do thatâand get driving. And within 20 seconds, you know you have messed it up. This little car isnât going to be hauling anything anywhere, itâs a disaster, your wheels are spinning all over the place, the steel has fallen out and not for the first time in this game you will be back to, and spending a lot of time at, the drawing board.
Mars First Logistics is, at its heart, a physics puzzler. If youâve ever blown up a rocket on the launchpad in Kerbal Space Program or driven a misshapen buggy off a cliff in Tears of the Kingdom, youâll be right at home here. Itâs not the challenge itself youâre really out to master, but the way that challenge is represented in a world that has a ruthless awareness of its own gravity:
All that jiggling around and broken cars and repeated failures could have been a recipe for frustration, but as the video above shows, Mars First Logistics is anything but. Thanks to a combination of its floaty gravity, cheery visuals andâI cannot quantify this, so just trust meâcute handling, to play it for stretches of time is to be at the helm of an adorable little blooper reel, each stuck payload or spinning set of tyres eliciting more of a âhaha, weâll get âem next timeâ than a âfuck this, I hate itâ.
Please note I donât want to somehow demean or dismiss Mars First Logisticsâ puzzling credentials by focusing solely on the fact itâs funny (even though, compared to gamingâs own deeply unfunny norms, this is a comedic masterpiece). Itâs funny because itâs so hard, and that humour does a fantastic job of defusing the trial-and-error that could so easily have frustrated in a game like this. Even Tears of the Kingdomâs toughest nuts are childâs play compared to some of the challenges here, which donât just ask a lot of you in terms of carrying them outâdelicately balancing an ever-toppling payload as you drive it over bumpy hillsâbut in preparing for them in the first place.
See, Mars First Logistics isnât an immediately open sandbox game, it makes you earn it. You donât start it with every tool at your fingertips, each part available in limitless quantities. You get money for completing courier jobs, and you can then spend that money unlocking more parts. So thereâs an economy at play, allowing you to focus on the type of vehicles you want to build, and how fancy you want to make them.

I found myself spending most of my time not on the gameâs open world but in its LEGO-like building screen, endlessly tinkering with wheels and control arms and servos that can be arrayed however you like them, or at least however you think theyâll be able to get a job done.
Itâs fun to mess around with, and can allow for creations of immense precision, but I think the real joy of Mars First Logistics is that it doesnât need you to be perfect. You can shoot for it, sure, but at the end of the day youâre here to do a job, and so long as you get it done, the game is happy.
Take the steel beam job I mentioned above. I could have spent an age agonising over the most economical and functional vehicle possible, which is something the game definitely allows for and a path which some players might feel compelled to force themselves down. What I ended up doing after a few hilariously inept failures, though, was creating a buggy that could just drag the beam precariously across the countryside, which worked so long as I drove really carefully.
A good video game would have forced me to make the economical and functional one. A very good one would let me make whatever the hell I want. A great video game lets me do whatever I want and makes it funny while Iâm screwing it up.