
Game intel
King of Meat
Are you hell-bent on destruction? Or a creator-of-chaos? The most-watched, sometimes controversial but always talked-about survival game show, KING OF MEAT, is…
This year’s Summer Game Fest overflowed with sequels and safe bets, but Glowmade’s King of Meat stole the spotlight. The developers admit the name grew out of a late-night pub session, so from the outset you know corporate dryness isn’t invited. After a hands-on demo, it’s clear this isn’t just comedic dressing—it’s a systems-driven playground built for communal chaos and creative play.
King of Meat blends fast-paced hack-and-slash action with slapstick spectacle. Every arena is presented like a televised flesh fight, complete with trapdoor pratfalls and over-the-top physics. Newcomers can jump in with simple button-mashing fun, while combo junkies will find enough juggling, launch combos, and score multipliers to chase high-score bragging rights. It feels like Street Fighter’s precision meets a variety-show rubber chicken routine.

Most UGC titles either bury you in menus or devolve into impossible troll levels. King of Meat flips that script: you must finish your own map before anyone else sees it, and curated playlists highlight standout community arenas. Robust reporting tools and parental controls help keep the carnage fun instead of chaotic. It’s a moderation model that could set a new standard for player-built platforms.

As more studios lean on player content to drive engagement, King of Meat offers an alternative to bare-bones editors and pay-to-play economies. By investing in both creative depth and community health, Glowmade is betting that a positive ecosystem fuels longevity. If it works, we could see bigger publishers adopt similar guardrails and richer toolsets for UGC experiences.

In a sea of grimdark dungeons and convoluted editors, King of Meat’s irreverent tone and community-first approach feel like a refreshing gut punch. Whether you’re staging a five-star flesh battle or tinkering with logic-driven contraptions, this title looks poised to deliver the shared playground most UGC games promise but rarely fulfill. If Glowmade pulls it off, we may be talking about King of Meat long after 2025’s launch rush has settled.
Get access to exclusive strategies, hidden tips, and pro-level insights that we don't share publicly.
Ultimate Gaming Strategy Guide + Weekly Pro Tips