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PEAK

PEAK

By Landfall

581
12/2/25
Paid

If you like multiplayer games that are focused on something other than combat, then PEAK may be your next go-to adventure. In this game, players need to work as a team to achieve their goal: climbing a mountain.

About PEAK

PEAK is a multiplayer co-op climbing game. Players have to cooperate to ascend a mountain that does not repeat itself. The scenery changes within 24 hours, and therefore, the path you have walked one day may not be there the following day. This implies that players have to be flexible and think on their feet —or, in this case, on the rocks.

It’s not a racing game, and there are no enemies to fight. The challenge comes from the mountain itself. Ledges disappear. Winds knock you off balance. Fog limits what you can see. It’s a game about coordination, not speed.

You play with up to three other people. Each of you starts at the base and makes your way up together. The goal is simple: reach the top. But getting there takes teamwork. You’ll run into moments where one player slips or can’t make a jump, and the rest have to step in. There’s voice chat built into the game, so you can talk and plan things as you go. You can also play offline in single-player mode.

PEAK doesn’t try to overwhelm you with features. It sticks to one idea: cooperative climbing, and explores it fully. You tie ropes, help each other over gaps, share supplies, and react to whatever the mountain throws your way. You manage stamina, find and consume survival items like questionable food and energy drinks; there are multiple climbing tools, such as climbing spikes, and you also collect badges and cosmetics as you progress.

Why Should I Download PEAK?

If you are bored with loud, fast games, PEAK is different. It does not attempt to amaze you with fancy graphics and thousands of upgrades. It simply leaves you and your friends at the bottom of a moving mountain and goes, “Make it work out amongst yourselves.”

And that is the nice part. You do not have to be a good aim or combo memorizer. All you have to do is listen, reason, and discuss with your team. It is a slower game, and that is what makes it interesting. Each time you climb, it is a new thing. The weather may change. A shortcut may disappear. There is a possibility of taking a shortcut or even making a detour at the wrong time. You never actually know.

It is also one of those games that does not forget the little things. Such as when a person is about to fall, and the others of the party rush to pull him or her out. Or when you are all silent for a minute or two, and all you are doing is breathing through the fog, and you are not sure what is going to happen. It is not the type of tension that exhausts you. It makes you inquisitive.

The voice chat within a game is of great assistance. It is more natural because the sound varies depending on the distance between you and a person. You will yell when you are slipping. You will laugh at the person being in a strange position. And you will really feel connected, even when you are all sitting in your rooms with headsets.

It is also a pleasant feature that the game does not push you. No clock is ticking, nobody is chasing you. You go as fast as you want to go. Some teams are slow to come up because they want to explore and discover. Others run up, trying to see what they can get away with. Both of them are effective.

PEAK is good to look into, in case you enjoy problem-solving, together with people, responding to unpredictable things, and having some laughs along the way. It is not a game, it is a common ascent.

Is PEAK Free?

No, PEAK is not free; it is a premium game. You have to buy the game once. No subscriptions. No hidden fees. Just one payment, and you’re in. Everything the game offers is available upfront, including multiplayer and updates. There is a badge system that rewards you with cosmetic items and recognition for your achievements.

What Operating Systems Are Compatible with PEAK?

As of now, PEAK can be used by Windows users. It requires the use of a 64-bit version of Windows and, thus, may not run on older systems or systems that are not supported. No news on Mac or Linux versions, as yet. 

It’s best to have a stable internet connection, too, especially since you’ll be talking with your team and climbing together in real time. You can find the detailed system requirements on the Steam page, but generally, a mid-range PC should do the job.

What Are the Alternatives to PEAK?

R.E.P.O. is a lot louder than PEAK. You and your friends play as agents collecting property in dangerous environments. It leans more toward chaotic fun than slow teamwork. Think of rooms collapsing, wild gadgets, and slapstick moments. It shares the cooperative feel with PEAK, but it’s faster, sillier, and more explosive. You’ll also use physics-based object handling (heavy, fragile loot), and there’s a meta-progression system with upgrades, gear, and weapons. If PEAK is about slow climbs, R.E.P.O. is more about surviving chaos while trying to complete a job.

Content Warning is a game that flips the idea of danger into something you document. You explore creepy places with friends, recording what happens on an old camera. The goal isn’t just to escape, it’s to capture enough weirdness on tape to go viral. That adds a strange layer of pressure. It’s still co-op, and it still deals with unpredictable situations, but it’s wrapped in dark humor. You won’t be climbing, but you will be planning and panicking together, which gives it a similar feeling. You can customize your face with an ASCII-face customizer, earn ad revenue by uploading footage to “SpöökTube”, buy gear and items with your views, and dive into the Old World via a diving bell with an oxygen mechanic.

The Headliners are the most different of the three. There’s no mountain or team survival. Instead, it puts you in charge of editing news headlines and deciding what stories get published. It’s a single-player game, but it plays with the idea of ripple effects, small choices leading to big consequences. If you liked the changing world in PEAK and the idea of cause and effect, this game offers a slower, thoughtful version of that, just through words instead of climbing. In fact, The Headliners supports up to 8-player co-op (in custom games mode), features a gear/upgrade system (shop in the lobby), a photo and camera mechanic that earns in-game cash, and allows you to explore new maps (like Brooklyn Bridge).

PEAK

PEAK

Paid
581

Specifications

Last update December 2, 2025
License Paid
Downloads 581 (last 30 days)
Author Landfall
Category Games
OS Windows 64 bits - 10/11

Screenshots

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