
Game intel
Turnip Boy Robs a Bank
Turnip Boy is back! This time he’s teaming up with the fearsome Pickled Gang to plan and execute the weirdest heist of all time. Shake down hostages, steal pre…
Free games on Epic are usually a roll of the dice. This week’s pick caught my eye because it isn’t a dusty licensed tie-in or a marketing throwaway – Turnip Boy Robs a Bank is a small, smart indie that actually improves on its predecessor and plays like a compact, mean little heist roguelike. That matters when the store’s weekly freebies lean toward padding your library rather than adding games you’ll play.
If you remember Turnip Boy Commits Tax Evasion for its charm and jokes, Robs a Bank doubles down on the joke while sharpening the core play loop. Multiple outlets note the sequel leans into action-roguelike territory: procedural runs through a botanical bank, faster-paced combat, and a bigger focus on experimenting with weapons and loadouts. Players fight guards, negotiate with hostages and loot the vaults — all wrapped in the same offbeat writing that made the first game a cult hit.
That tonal mix matters. Snoozy Kazoo didn’t simply paste roguelike trappings onto the original; reviewers and Steam users (about 95% positive across reports) say the combat and loop are genuinely more engaging. For a small indie, that combination of confident design and sharp writing is rare — and exactly the kind of “freebie” that becomes a surprise time sink rather than clutter in your library.

Epic’s weekly giveaways are marketing hygiene: they bring players into the launcher, where other sales and exclusives happen. But this one also serves Epic’s users. Unlike those weeks when the free pick feels like a shrug, Turnip Boy is a genuinely good indie — which tells you more about the unevenness of Epic’s picks than the quality of this game. In other words: this is one of the freebies that justifies the system, not one that proves it.

Two practical reasons to grab it this week: one, it’s free-to-keep from March 5-12 so the cost is literally zero; two, it’s the sort of game that benefits from iterative runs — the moment you claim it you can start learning its weapon synergies and meta, which is where it gets sticky-good. If you’ve been burned by roguelikes that loop but don’t reward experimentation, Turnip Boy’s tighter combat is a welcome change.
Is Snoozy Kazoo planning ongoing support — new heist modifiers, seasonal roguelike updates, or extra rooms — or is this a one-and-done boutique roguelike? The game’s structure screams “expandable” if the studio wants to keep players returning.

Turnip Boy Robs a Bank is a smart, funny indie heist roguelike that tightens combat and replayability over its predecessor. It’s free on the Epic Games Store from March 5–12, 2026 — and unlike many freebies, this one’s worth downloading and actually playing.
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