Home News Meccha Chameleon proves an explosive hit with over 10 million copies sold
gaming Jun 28, 2026 · 👁 2 views · Syndicated from PC Gamer

Meccha Chameleon proves an explosive hit with over 10 million copies sold

I was blown away when Meccha Chameleon, the friendsloppish PvP hit where you paint your body in an expressive game of hide-and-seek, sold a million copies in a few days. Here I am blown away again as the novelty refuses to wear off: less than a month after release, the game has sold a whopping 10 million copies, accord...

Meccha Chameleon proves an explosive hit with over 10 million copies sold

I was blown away when Meccha Chameleon, the friendsloppish PvP hit where you paint your body in an expressive game of hide-and-seek, sold a million copies in a few days. Here I am blown away again as the novelty refuses to wear off: less than a month after release, the game has sold a whopping 10 million copies, according to a Steam community news post. The proof is in the pudding—as I write this, the game has nearly 200,000 concurrent players, according to SteamDB.

This success feels like the perfect storm of a few different things. Hide-and-seek is a pretty timeless form of uncomplicated joy, as proven by long-lived games like Dead by Daylight and evergreen custom modes like prop hunt. Meccha Chameleon also feels adjacent to the friendslop craze despite its team-based format, seizing on a moment when inexpensive, low-spec multiplayer games are selling like hot cakes.

That last point has helped the game secure all sorts of free marketing and word of mouth from streamers and YouTubers, with videos featuring everything from gameplay highlights to viral clips of people putting camouflaged stick figures in real places. The game just got cloud support too, so even the lowest of the lowest specs can technically run the game. At just six dollars, it's got an extremely low barrier to entry—a salve to the sting induced by things like GTA 6's $100 mega-version.

And as if all that weren't enough, the game itself is pretty good, as it turns out. In his review, PC Gamer news writer Lincoln Carpenter said that despite its being "wrapped in clumsy software," Meccha Chameleon is an essential game for its sheer novelty. It's "the special sort of game that can remind me how much fun I can have being a top-tier bastard," he wrote.

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Read full story at PC Gamer →

Original reporting appears on the publisher’s site.

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