• My Games

Sorry Bob is a chaotic surgery simulator where awkward one-hand controls and tricky physics challenge you to keep Bob alive.

Sorry Bob throws you into a strange medical “nightmare” where confidence matters more than qualifications. You play Nigel Burke, an untrained surgeon trying to keep Bob alive using unstable tools and one floating hand.

Nothing behaves the way you expect. Movements feel clumsy on purpose. Tools slip at the worst possible moment. What should be a simple transplant quickly turns into controlled chaos.

GAME INTRODUCTION

Sorry Bob unfolds in first-person view, but you only control a single hand hovering over the patient. Each level gives you a transplant objective while a blood-loss meter slowly drains toward zero. Your goal is clear: complete the operation before Bob runs out of blood.

A typical procedure looks like this:

  • Read the objective - Identify which organ must be replaced.
  • Break open the chest - Carefully smash through ribs without causing massive blood loss.
  • Remove damaged organs - Clear space quickly to improve visibility.
  • Insert the replacement organ - Drop it into position before time runs out.

Control That Challenge Your Coordination

  • A - Pinky.
  • W - Ring finger.
  • E - Middle finger.
  • R - Index finger.
  • Spacebar - Thumb.
  • Mouse Move - Move your hand.
  • Left Click - Lower hand to grab.
  • Right Click (Hold) - Rotate wrist.

Why It’s So Hard (On Purpose)

  • Several mechanics make every surgery unpredictable:
  • One-handed control limits precision.
  • Finger-based keys disrupt natural coordination.
  • Physics causes tools to slide unexpectedly.
  • Blood drains quickly from small errors.
  • Clutter inside the chest blocks your view.
  • Success comes from careful movement, not fast reactions.

YOUR NEXT FAVORITE SIMULATION GAMES

Be the first to comment