Easy Delivery Co. is a relaxing driving game with strange secrets. Chill out, make deliveries, and get to know the mysterious residents of this mountain town, all while earning well below minimum wage. This chill package delivery game allows you to play as a cat who delivers packages on a snowy mountain. Drinking coffee and energy drinks keeps you alive while progressing in the snowy world. The main gameplay loop consists of picking up deliveries and delivering them to their destination.
Welcome to Into Indie Games’ review of Easy Delivery Co., where we’ll cover everything we loved and didn’t like about the game.
For more information about the game, check out their official Steam Page here.

Based in scenic Mountain Town, you are tasked with delivering goods from A to B to make enough money to keep yourself going. I was fortunate enough to be able to hop into it 2 days early, and it has totally exceeded my expectations. The full version adds more areas to drive around, items and upgrades to buy, and secrets. As the snowy town’s newest delivery driver, your goal is to put your pedal to the metal and get those deliveries flying out the door. I walk around a bit, but don’t stray too far from the truck because it’s pretty cold out there.

Mostly, though, you’ll be driving your sweet ride up and down treacherous mountainside roads, and you can do that in either first or third person. I preferred to drive the car in first person as it gives a unique experience. You meet the mysterious pup that gives you your main quest objectives. They’re mostly used to explore different parts of the map and buy the stuff that helps you do so.
First, they want us to buy a Lighter to help clear the way north, so that means we have to get a work. At any given point, you can use your easy OS tablet to check your goal log and pick up new jobs. I love delivering the packages while completing the jobs in that area. Some have pick up and drop off points that are a few meters apart, and others take you a lot further and sometimes into completely different regions.

Unless I’m missing something, the map doesn’t actually tell you exactly where you’re located. But it is pretty easy to figure out the lay of the land and plan a route accordingly. There aren’t giant waypoints or arrows telling you where to go that confused me first. As long as you mostly stick to the road, you should do good. The maps are small enough that you get to know them pretty well, and which cliffs are and aren’t safe enough to drive off of.
As you pick up new jobs, you’ll slowly start to meet the locals, a decent number of whom think that we look suspiciously like their previous delivery driver, Seb. The Lighter costs me a whopping $19.99, whereas a full set of snow tires only set me back a few bucks more at $21.97. I don’t know what’s going on with this town’s economy.

You also need to save some of your cash for energy drinks or coffee to keep you going, and the occasional tank of gas. None of this is too difficult to do, as there’s always a vending machine nearby and your gas lasts a pretty long time. What’s more frightening than capitalism, though, is nighttime. Not because any monsters or ghouls are waiting to get you, but because visibility can be very low, especially during a snowstorm. Still, I haven’t run into anything truly scary, unless you count this endless corridor.
Nothing is more satisfying than successfully completing a pizza delivery without dropping a single box. The did take a few attempts, but putting on some chill tunes as you cruise through this treacherous winter wonderland makes it a lot more bearable.

Numerous mini-missions require you to spend extended amounts of time outside. There are shops and locations that you can pop into to buy certain items. I suspect that as the game evolves and expands, and opens up, more of these shops will become available. To make life even more difficult, though, you have energy levels that drop very fast. They can only be boosted by buying cans of energy drinks and coffee.
Nothing is really explained very well, and that is, until at least you discover the informant, which is a cat. It sits beside an open fire and gives you tasks and guides you to a sort of progress through the game. The physics, although not very realistic, are realistic enough to be playable and enjoyable. Then there’s the exploration, the problem solving, and the discovery in all of the stuff that you don’t yet know.

On top of all these positives, the game audio, I think, is actually really rather good. So, the negatives, the graphics are absolutely ancient. It’s very difficult to see what you’re doing. Somehow, this adds to the charm. It’s very easy to miss the knowledgeable one. And if you do that, you’ll be driving around in circles for a little while trying to figure out what’s going on because there’s no real sort of linear helping system.
You have to find that guy or figure it out for yourself. In my humble opinion, for what it is, I think the price is too high. But that’s going to be different for everybody. It can get a little bit repetitive, and I find it quite frustrating that there are no straps for the truck. Losing cargo doesn’t really seem to matter very much at the moment anyway.

Whether or not that’s something that will change the full game or become more of a thing later on, or maybe it will stay the same. One thing that I didn’t like is the fact that you cannot reverse and do a 180 skid even though you’re in a slippery condition. I’ve already seen a lantern for about $60, which is very expensive. It’ll take you a little while to get that sort of money together.
The improvement in the physics and perhaps even the graphics just tidied up a little bit, so it’s a little bit easier to see. I’ve got to say driving along in first person is really quite good. Driving along in third person, which is something I never do, feels very natural. The audio is exceptionally good considering how limited everything else is.

Easy Deliver Co. may just be the perfect game for you if you like SnowRunner, Animal Crossing, Death Stranding, and a short hike. A very broad range of interests, I know, which is what makes this title so special. If you’re in the mood for some cozy driving spiced up with funky dialogue, light survival elements, then hop into the trucks and do some deliveries.
Developer: Sam C
Country of Origin: Canada
Publisher: Oro Interactive
Release Date: September 18, 2025 (Microsoft Windows
⭐⭐⭐⭐
Rating: 4 out of 5.This review is based on a copy of the game provided by the developer. The PC version of the game was played for this review of Easy Delivery Co. (Steam).
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