Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll on Steam - User reviews, Price & Information

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Everyone knows who the real king of Flex and today he is ready to teach you. Plunge into an incredible adventure, meet different characters from the universe "gachimuchi" and find out how deep you are ready to go. However, there is one problem...

Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll is a dark fantasy, memes and comedy game developed and published by GachiSoft.
Released on December 19th 2019 is available only on Windows in 10 languages: English, Russian, French, German, Spanish - Spain, Portuguese - Brazil, Korean, Ukrainian, Japanese and Simplified Chinese.

It has received 322 reviews of which 267 were positive and 55 were negative resulting in a rating of 7.7 out of 10. 😊

The game is currently priced at 0.99€ on Steam.


The Steam community has classified Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll into these genres:

Media & Screenshots

Get an in-depth look at Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll through various videos and screenshots.

System requirements

These are the minimum specifications needed to play the game. For the best experience, we recommend that you verify them.

Windows
  • OS *: Windows 7
  • Processor: Intel Core i5-4570
  • Memory: 8 MB RAM
  • Graphics: GTX 660
  • Storage: 350 MB available space

User reviews & Ratings

Explore reviews from Steam users sharing their experiences and what they love about the game.

Oct. 2025
Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll is one of those rare games that wears its absurdity as a badge of honor. Developed and published by GachiSoft, it exists somewhere between a parody, a meme tribute, and an offbeat arcade experience. The game takes inspiration from the “gachimuchi” subculture—an internet phenomenon centered around exaggerated machismo and homoerotic humor—and transforms it into an over-the-top, tongue-in-cheek action puzzler. From the moment it begins, it’s clear that the developers have no intention of delivering a traditional or serious experience. Instead, they aim to create a spectacle that celebrates and mocks itself at the same time, a chaotic blend of humor, camp, and surprisingly functional arcade mechanics. The story, if it can even be called that, revolves around proving who the true “king of flex” is, sending players through a series of challenges that feel like a fever dream of gym culture, internet memes, and surreal heroism. Visually, the game embraces its low-budget origins but compensates with sheer personality. Everything is saturated in neon light and exaggerated masculinity, with muscled heroes flexing against flamboyant backdrops while heavy electronic music pulses in the background. The game proudly features caricatured characters and tongue-in-cheek animations that constantly remind you that you’re not supposed to take anything seriously. Its art direction walks a fine line between parody and homage, evoking the camp aesthetic of old Flash animations while incorporating smooth effects and explosive transitions. The result is an experience that feels simultaneously ridiculous and strangely captivating. Each stage is filled with bizarre imagery—blocks, biceps, and glowing orbs that explode into showers of color—and the soundtrack completes the package with an infectious energy that makes even the silliest moments entertaining. The presentation, in all its chaotic glory, is precisely what gives the game its unique charm. Underneath the absurdity, Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll functions as a hybrid between a brick-breaker and a boss-battle arcade game. The mechanics are simple: you launch balls toward obstacles, destroy them, and occasionally face off against bizarre bosses who serve as tests of timing and reflex. There’s even the option to customize your “balls” and the hero’s appearance, pushing the self-aware humor further. The game adds small twists to the traditional formula, like one-handed play modes, customizable visual effects, and unpredictable enemy patterns. Despite its simplicity, the core gameplay loop is surprisingly satisfying, particularly in the first few stages where the combination of tight timing, vibrant effects, and booming music create a rhythm that’s easy to fall into. It’s not deep or innovative by design—it’s meant to be fast, flashy, and funny—but it delivers enough engagement to keep players entertained for short bursts. Completing its fourteen levels offers a compact but energetic experience, one that feels handcrafted for replayability among fans of the genre’s simplicity. Yet, much like its meme roots, the appeal of Gachi Heroes 2 depends heavily on how well you understand its humor and how long you can tolerate it. The game’s mechanics are basic, and once the novelty of the aesthetic and music wears off, the repetition begins to show. There isn’t much variation between levels beyond the changing backgrounds and the occasional boss fight, and the progression system is linear with no option to skip levels or revisit past ones. For players expecting mechanical depth or a lasting challenge, the experience will feel shallow. However, that seems to be part of the joke—Gachi Heroes 2 isn’t pretending to be more than it is. Its greatest strength lies in its confidence to embrace its own ridiculousness. The overblown presentation, exaggerated poses, and constant winks to the audience create an atmosphere where the humor becomes part of the gameplay itself. The player is never allowed to forget that they are participating in a parody, and that self-awareness is what makes the game memorable. What ultimately defines Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll is its unabashed identity. It’s a game built for a very specific audience—those who understand internet irony, appreciate camp humor, and find delight in over-the-top absurdity. It isn’t trying to compete with mainstream titles or reinvent the arcade formula; instead, it’s a celebration of niche culture transformed into interactive comedy. For less than a dollar, it delivers an experience that is brief, bizarre, and unapologetically funny, the kind of game you show to friends just to watch their reaction. Beneath the humor, there’s a small but functional game with decent controls, responsive feedback, and a gleeful disregard for convention. It may not be deep or refined, but it achieves exactly what it sets out to do—make players laugh, cringe, and flex their way through a world where nothing makes sense and that’s exactly the point. Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll isn’t about mastery or storytelling; it’s about having fun with the absurd, reveling in chaos, and embracing the weird side of gaming culture with a smile and a perfectly timed flex. Rating: 7/10
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July 2025
This game saved my marriage.
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March 2025
There was a time, long ago, when I believed that Gachi Heroes was the pinnacle of human experience—an odyssey that stretched beyond the mere confines of a “game” into the raw and pulsating heart of existence itself. I was a fool. Gachi Heroes 2: FlexBoll has obliterated my prior understanding of reality, reshaping my consciousness into something greater—something firmer. If Gachi Heroes was a revelation, then FlexBoll is the ascension. It does not merely continue the journey—it forces you to acknowledge that the first game was but the warm-up, a mere stretching of sinew before the true test of endurance begins. Nietzsche once proclaimed, "One must still have chaos in oneself to be able to give birth to a dancing star." And dance I did, amidst the glistening oiled bodies and the rhythmic echoes of sinewy collision, my soul torn between exertion and ecstasy. But this is more than physical. This is ontological. The game demands that you abandon your preconceptions of agency and identity. At first, you believe you are in control. You flex. You boll. But as the game grips you—no, as he grips you—you begin to understand: you were never the master. The repetitions of movement, the deepening impact of each strike—it is a dialectic, a discourse between submission and domination, between the self and the other. Is it me who wields the paddle, or am I merely the instrument through which the game plays itself? The physics, refined to an almost ethereal perfection, no longer merely simulate flesh upon flesh, but embody a philosophy of motion. Every impact resonates, every ripple tells a story. The sweat is not rendered—it is felt. I reached a point where I could swear the screen breathed with me, a synchronization of man and machine, of flesh and function. And then—the final test. The Ultimate Boll. A moment so profound I dare not spoil it for those yet uninitiated. I can only say this: I was shattered, reassembled, and born anew. Would I recommend Gachi Heroes 2: FlexBoll? That is the wrong question. The game does not require your recommendation—it simply is. Like the tide, like the seasons, like the inevitability of a firm slap in the dead of night, it exists beyond desire or approval. You do not play FlexBoll. You endure it. And if you are worthy, you emerge changed.
Expand the review

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Frequently Asked Questions

Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll is currently priced at 0.99€ on Steam.

Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll is currently not on sale. You can purchase it for 0.99€ on Steam.

Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll received 267 positive votes out of a total of 322 achieving a rating of 7.71.
😊

Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll was developed and published by GachiSoft.

Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll is playable and fully supported on Windows.

Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll is not playable on MacOS.

Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll is not playable on Linux.

Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll is a single-player game.

Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll does not currently offer any DLC.

Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll does not support mods via Steam Workshop.

Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll does not support Steam Remote Play.

Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll is enabled for Steam Family Sharing. This means you can share the game with authorized users from your Steam Library, allowing them to play it on their own accounts. For more details on how the feature works, you can read the original Steam Family Sharing announcement or visit the Steam Family Sharing user guide and FAQ page.

You can find solutions or submit a support ticket by visiting the Steam Support page for Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll.

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Additionally, we incorporate data from the SteamSpy API, which offers insights into game sales and player statistics. This helps us present a comprehensive view of each game's popularity and performance within the gaming community.

Last Updates
Steam data 19 January 2026 14:27
SteamSpy data 25 January 2026 15:45
Steam price 28 January 2026 20:26
Steam reviews 27 January 2026 18:07

If you'd like to dive deeper into the details about Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll, we invite you to check out a few dedicated websites that offer extensive information and insights. These platforms provide valuable data, analysis, and user-generated reports to enhance your understanding of the game and its performance.

  • SteamDB - A comprehensive database of everything on Steam about Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll
  • SteamCharts - Analysis of Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll concurrent players on Steam
  • ProtonDB - Crowdsourced reports on Linux and Steam Deck Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll compatibility
Gachi Heroes 2: Flexboll
Rating
7.7
267
55
Game modes
Features
Online players
0
Developer
GachiSoft
Publisher
GachiSoft
Release 19 Dec 2019
Platforms