RoboCop: Rogue City - Unfinished Business Drops Below $10 on Steam in a Fresh Weekend Deal
By CriticalPixel ·
RoboCop: Rogue City - Unfinished Business has landed in the sweet spot where a good game stops asking for a full dinner price and starts looking like an easy weekend decision. Wario64 flagged the standalone RoboCop adventure at $9.72 on a GMG XP Offer on July 11, with a separate $11.99 US PlayStation Plus price listed in the same post. That is the sort of price gap that makes a rough week of games feel a little less expensive. The offer is worth checking at checkout because store eligibility and regional rules can move faster than a steel-plated cop in a hallway.
The deal is also specific enough to avoid the usual bundle fog. The GMG price is for the PC version, while the PlayStation Plus figure is a separate console offer, so neither number should be treated as a universal price across every storefront. Several Brazilian deal accounts also listed the PlayStation 5 version at R$127.49 through Mercado Livre coupon offers on July 10. Those posts do not prove that every regional checkout will show the same number, but they do show the game is circulating through more than one discount channel this weekend.
What you are actually getting
The official Steam listing puts the game on July 17, 2025, and credits Teyon as developer with Nacon as publisher. It is a single-player action adventure that is marked playable on Steam Deck, which gives the PC deal a useful second life beyond a desk setup. Steam currently shows a R$109.99 Brazilian store price on the page I checked, while the review panel shows 84 percent positive across 3,616 reviews and 83 percent positive across 153 recent reviews. Those numbers do not turn the game into a masterpiece by decree, but they are a much sturdier signal than one excited sale post.
Unfinished Business is a standalone follow-up set after the events of RoboCop: Rogue City. Teyon sends Alex Murphy into OmniTower, a giant housing complex taken over by heavily armed mercenaries, and the campaign builds its combat around tight corridors, ugly machinery, and the blunt force of a police cyborg who does not need a cover system to make a point. The Steam description calls out drones, explosive robots, anti-personnel turrets, miniguns, jetpack soldiers, and katana-wielding enemies. It also adds the Cryo Cannon, returns Peter Weller as RoboCop, and lets players take control of the ED-209 for a stretch.
That design makes the current price more interesting than a random old game clearance. This is a focused licensed shooter built around a very clear fantasy, not a sprawling service game waiting for a season pass to explain why you should care. The appeal is the same reason the original game found an audience: Teyon understands that RoboCop works best when the violence is stiff, the corporate satire is ugly, and the player feels like a walking tank with paperwork. A sub-$10 PC entry point gives that formula room to win over people who ignored it at launch.
The community signal is positive, but still limited
The social reaction around this specific weekend deal is limited rather than explosive. Wario64's post had a small number of replies and modest visible engagement when checked, while Promotec Games and Games Mais Barato separately posted the Brazilian PS5 offer around R$127.49. That gives us multiple deal listings from different accounts, not a broad community verdict about the campaign. The stronger signal comes from Steam, where the overall and recent review scores are both in the positive range. There is no reason to pretend a handful of deal posts represents a consensus, and there is no need to when the store data already says the game has landed well with most buyers.
The regional split matters here. A US player looking at GMG XP or PlayStation Plus is making a different decision from a Brazilian player looking at R$127.49 on a marketplace coupon, and both are different from someone staring at the direct Steam price. Check the platform, the activation region, and the final checkout total before paying. Marketplace coupons can vanish, third-party keys can carry restrictions, and a low headline number is useless if the code cannot be redeemed where you live.
CriticalPixel take
At $9.72, RoboCop: Rogue City - Unfinished Business is the kind of compact licensed game that benefits from a late price swing. Teyon did not need to turn this into another endless progression treadmill; it made a loud, narrow campaign about pushing through a tower and dispensing industrial-grade justice. The Steam Deck rating makes the GMG offer even easier to justify for players who want something chunky enough for a few nights but direct enough to finish. The only caution is that GMG XP is a particular offer, not a guarantee that every store has suddenly matched the same price.
If you skipped the original because a full-price licensed RoboCop game sounded like a gamble, this is a far safer experiment. The current deal does not erase the usual questions about key regions, console access, or whether this very specific kind of shooter is your thing. It does give the game a price that matches its focused ambitions, and the Steam reviews suggest the rough edges are not stopping players from enjoying the ride. RoboCop is at his best when the sales pitch is simple: load the Auto-9, walk into the OmniTower, and let the bad guys discover that property damage is part of the law enforcement package.