Biomechanical Toy (QUByte Classics) cover art
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Biomechanical Toy (QUByte Classics)

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Release dateJuly 16, 2026
PlatformsPC
DeveloperQUByte Interactive
PublisherPiko Interactive, Bleem!, QUByte Interactive
Official siteVisit ↗
LanguagesEnglish, French, Italian, German, Spanish, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Russian, Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese

About Biomechanical Toy (QUByte Classics)

Biomechanical Toy (QUByte Classics) revives a piece of Spanish arcade history that many players missed during its limited 1995 release. The release date for Biomechanical Toy (QUByte Classics) is July 16, 2026, bringing this cult-favorite run-and-gunner to PC with a suite of preservation-focused features. Unlike the darker, militaristic tones often found in the genre, this title uses a surrealist toy-box aesthetic where you control Inguz, an action hero tasked with recovering a life-giving pendulum from a thief named Scrubby.

The gameplay logic pulls heavily from the high-octane pace of Metal Slug, emphasizing forward momentum and heavy screen-clearing ordnance. You move through environments that serve as more than just static backdrops, utilizing interactive elements like springy mushrooms for verticality and destructible chests for power-ups. The arsenal leans into arcade excess, featuring explosive ammunition and full-screen bombs to manage the biomechanical hordes. The central tension lies in the balance between the frantic projectile count and the precise platforming required to navigate its vibrant, pixel-heavy levels.

PC Release Date and New Quality of Life Features

QUByte Interactive is positioning this as a definitive version rather than a simple port. Because the original 1995 difficulty was designed to eat quarters, this modern iteration includes a rewind function and save states to mitigate the punishing arcade-style deaths. There are also aesthetic toggles, such as CRT filters, to replicate the visual output of the original cabinets. While the arcade original was celebrated for its fluid animation and detailed art, the ultimate test for this version will be whether its specific 90s physics feel responsive enough for modern hardware without the tactile feedback of a joystick.

This release is a clear target for arcade preservationists and fans of Zeus Software who want to see how the genre evolved outside of Japan and the US. Those who find modern roguelike shooters too cluttered may appreciate the linear, handcrafted progression of this 90s classic. If you enjoy precision-based action with a weird, mechanical twist, this is a solid pickup for your digital library. Hold off on a pre-order and wait until the July launch to ensure the emulation and control mapping are as sharp as the original 1995 code.

Features

Single-playerSteam AchievementsFull controller supportKeyboard Only OptionDualShock Controller SupportDualSense Controller SupportSave AnytimeSteam CloudFamily Sharing

System requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 64-bit (1809 or later)
Processor
Intel Core i5-4570 3.2 GHz or better
Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
Intel HD Graphics 4600 / NVIDIA GTX 960 / AMD R9 280 or equivalent
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
1 GB available space

Recommended

OS
Windows 11
Processor
Intel Core i5-9600K / AMD Ryzen 5 3600 or better
Memory
16 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GTX 1660 / AMD RX 590 or better
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
1 GB available space

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