Totally Safe Moon Project unveiled

- Fake Moon and publisher rokaplay Select unveiled Totally Safe Moon Project on May 14, introducing a cooperative physics game about building a tower to the moon. - Fake Moon described the game as a four-player co-op project where players stack sofas, bicycles, cars, buses and houses, then haul up a laser. - Steam lists Totally Safe Moon Project as coming soon on PC, and Fake Moon has opened playtest sign-ups there.

Fake Moon and publisher rokaplay Select unveiled *Totally Safe Moon Project* this week, adding a new cooperative physics game to Steam and a round of announcement coverage across games sites. The reveal surfaced on May 14 through the game’s Steam page, trailer distribution and a press release, and was followed on May 16 by an IndieGame.com write-up. The pitch is direct: players stack everyday objects into a tower that reaches the moon before an asteroid destroys Earth. No release date has been announced, but the Steam page says the game is “coming soon” on PC. ### When was the game actually announced? May 14 is the clearest public announcement date in the material now online. The Steam Community page for *Totally Safe Moon Project* carries a post dated May 14 saying Fake Moon was “excited” to finally announce the game and that playtest sign-ups were open. May 16 is the date on the IndieGame.com article that summarized the reveal for readers. That article described the game as a physics-based cooperative title built around a tower to the moon, but it was reporting on an announcement already circulating through Steam, trailer uploads and a publisher press release. ### Who is making it, and who is publishing it? Fake Moon is the developer attached to the game across the Steam listing, trailer descriptions and press materials. rokaplay Select is named as the publisher in the press release and on Steam. (steamcommunity.com) A Games Press release published May 14 described Fake Moon as “a two-person team from Finland.” That detail does not appear in the IndieGame.com summary, but it is part of the publisher’s announcement package for the game. (indiegame.com) ### What do players actually do in the game? The Steam store page says players work together to “build a totally safe tower to the Moon” from everyday objects and then bring a laser to the top to destroy the incoming asteroid. (store.steampowered.com) The listed objects include sofas, bicycles, cars, buses and houses. The announcement trailer description distributed by GameTrailers and IGN says players must assemble “a large tower out of ordinary objects” while an asteroid heads toward Earth. (beta.gamespress.com) IndieGame.com described the same setup as a bright, cartoon-style physics game built around a swaying tower and repeated collapse. ### How many people can play together? The game is being presented as a four-player cooperative project. (store.steampowered.com) A Bluesky profile for the game described it as “a 4 player co-op game,” and the publisher press release called it a “chaotic online co-op adventure.” The Steam page also frames the game around teamwork rather than competition. It says there is “no competition and no pressure,” only cooperation and the question of how far players can get together. (youtube.com) ### Has Fake Moon said anything about platforms or timing? PC is the only platform publicly attached to the game so far. The Steam page lists *Totally Safe Moon Project* for PC, and trailer descriptions on GameTrailers and IGN say it is “coming soon to PC (Steam).” (bsky.app) A 2026 release window appears in the publisher press release and in coverage from Worthplaying, which reported on May 14 that the game was coming to PC in 2026. (store.steampowered.com) Steam itself uses the broader “coming soon” label rather than a dated release window. ### What can players do next? Steam is already taking playtest requests. (store.steampowered.com) The Steam Community post dated May 14 said sign-ups for an “upcoming Playtest” were open and that anyone with a Steam account could request access through the game’s page. The next public milestone is likely to come through that Steam listing, which now serves as the main source for platform details, store information and future updates. (beta.gamespress.com) As of May 17, the page still lists the game as coming soon on PC and does not provide a specific release date. (store.steampowered.com) (steamcommunity.com)

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