PowerWash Simulator is a simulation game developed by FuturLab. The game was published by Square Enix Collective. It went into Steam early access on May…
PowerWash Simulator is one of gaming’s most unlikely success stories, a first-person cleaning game from British studio FuturLab that turned the simple act of spraying dirt off surfaces into a soothing, oddly addictive phenomenon. There are no enemies, no timers, and no way to fail, just you, a power washer, and a world full of grime waiting to be blasted away. What began as a quirky indie experiment grew into a breakout hit, a full sequel, and a parade of high-profile crossover packs, proving there is a massive audience for games built around calm and satisfaction rather than conflict.
The premise could not be simpler. Players take on cleaning jobs, using a power washer to strip layers of dirt, mud, moss, and grime off everything from houses and playgrounds to cars, boats, and entire vehicles. Different nozzles, extensions, and cleaning chemicals help reach awkward spots and tackle stubborn filth, and the game tracks every speck so completionists can chase a perfect one hundred percent clean. The satisfaction comes from watching a filthy surface transform into a spotless one, often accompanied by a deeply pleasing change in sound as the dirt lifts away. It is methodical, meditative, and weirdly hard to put down, the kind of game players fire up to unwind and then look up to realize hours have passed.
PowerWash Simulator entered early access in 2021 and launched in full in 2022, developed by FuturLab and published in partnership with Square Enix. Set in the fictional town of Muckingham, its career mode strung together cleaning jobs while building a low-key story through text messages from quirky local clients. The game found an enormous audience, helped by a day-one launch on Game Pass, and became a streaming favorite thanks to its relaxing, commentary-friendly pace. It racked up millions of players and earned a reputation as the go-to game for decompressing after a long day, a genre-defining entry in the cozy gaming space.
A huge part of the franchise’s appeal has been its steady stream of licensed crossover packs, which drop the cleaning gameplay into beloved fictional worlds. The original game brought players to recognizable settings from SpongeBob SquarePants, Final Fantasy VII’s city of Midgar, the Tomb Raider universe with Croft Manor, Back to the Future, Warhammer 40,000, Shrek, Wallace & Gromit, and The Muppets. Each pack reimagines familiar locations and vehicles as cleaning jobs, letting fans scrub down everything from the Batmobile-style icons of their favorite franchises to fantastical alien environments. These collaborations turned PowerWash Simulator into a surprising crossroads of pop culture, and they have become one of the most anticipated parts of the series.
FuturLab released PowerWash Simulator 2 on October 23, 2025, this time self-publishing the sequel across PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X and S, Nintendo Switch 2, and PC. The follow-up built on everything that made the first game a hit, returning to Muckingham with 38 jobs, new tools, and smarter quality of life systems to streamline the cleaning. The biggest additions were a customizable home base for players to decorate and call their own, and full co-op support through both split-screen and online play, finally letting friends tackle the grime together. The sequel refined the formula rather than reinventing it, which was exactly what fans of the calming original wanted.
The sequel kept the crossover tradition alive, starting with an Adventure Time pack set in the Land of Ooo in spring 2026. The headline collaboration, though, is the Star Wars Pack, launching July 16, 2026 in partnership with Lucasfilm Games. Set during the events of the original Star Wars trilogy, it casts players as P0-W2, a brand new class five labor droid armed with a custom power washer, tasked with restoring iconic locations to a presentable state. The six jobs include cleaning the Lars Homestead on Tatooine, the Mos Eisley Cantina, an AT-AT on Hoth, an X-Wing, the Super Star Destroyer bridge, and the Millennium Falcon itself. It is a gloriously silly idea, scrubbing the galaxy far, far away one soapy blast at a time, and exactly the kind of crossover that keeps the series feeling fresh.
PowerWash Simulator endures because it offers something the rest of the industry largely ignores, a game with genuinely zero stress. In a market full of competition, difficulty spikes, and live-service pressure, a game about quietly making things clean stands out precisely because it asks nothing of the player but their attention. It is also a favorite among achievement hunters and completionists, who appreciate the clear, satisfying goal of cleaning every last surface. Between the relaxing core loop, the constant flow of pop culture crossovers, and a sequel that doubled down on what works, PowerWash Simulator has carved out a permanent place as gaming’s premier comfort experience.
PowerWash Simulator is a simulation game developed by FuturLab. The game was published by Square Enix Collective. It went into Steam early access on May…