Jumper is a challenging platformer style game where you must work your way to the top. Can you do it!?
s&box games list
Browse live s&box games by current players, 24h momentum, updates, votes, and Terry Score.
Jumper is a challenging platformer style game where you must work your way to the top. Can you do it!?
Ride an elevator between randomly selected experiences, survive each one, and make it back inside before the doors close
Watch Videos With Friends!
Create S&box's greatest farm with offline progression!
Help Papa send the undead back into the ground where they belong!
馃挘 Blow up your enemies and be the last one standing!
Immersive sim roleplay life simulator. Play both alone and together!
Serve healthy food in your sanitary restaurant.
Descend into the abyss as a company diver living in an unfortunate world.
Pull items to gain energy and get stronger while doing curls.
A simple multiplayer deathmatch where you can utilise your revolver to propel yourself across the map
The ultimate case opening and idle economy simulator. Build your black market empire, one case at a time.
Trapped in a mysterious room, you must search every corner, solve intricate puzzles, and uncover hidden clues to escape.
Meticulously inspect documents, race against the clock, follow the rules and navigate decisions to shape your life.
Progress with friends, destroy & collect coins, hatch eggs, find legendary pets and optimize your team!
A fast paced versus shooter. Battle with or against friends/bots, and earn in-game cash.
Recreating the old classic Deathrun! (Early Alpha thank you for your patience)
Blast your competition to bits in a high-octane bomb fest. Play up to 3 friends, strangers or bots!
A minimalist 2D shooter with multiple gamemodes
A rogue-like survivor where every run is a chaotic mess of cursed loot, overpowered weapons, and escalating hordes.
The ultimate multiplayer market simulator. Buy low, sell high, automate your profits with bots, and outsmart market crashes.
s&box games are playable packages published by creators on sbox.game. A game package can define its own rules, UI, maps, assets, systems, and multiplayer behavior. Some games are small experiments. Others are larger projects with active servers, regular updates, and their own communities.
The platform is built on a heavily modified version of Valve's Source 2 engine. Creators can publish games inside s&box, and s&box games can also be exported as standalone games and published elsewhere, including on Steam. Eligible games can also take part in the s&box Play Fund, which rewards creators based on player activity and other platform signals.
s&box's current platform monetization is centered on the Play Fund for games and maps, with Facepunch saying it wants to avoid pay-to-win incentives. That makes the package metrics here different from a marketplace driven mainly by in-game purchases.
Use this page as a live s&box games list and player count tracker. It sorts public game packages by live and historical signals. Player count shows how many people are playing a game right now according to the package data returned by s&box. Favorites and upvotes show longer-term interest. Terry Score is a confidence-weighted approval score based on upvotes, downvotes, and vote count. Momentum is measured by sbox.watch from local snapshots and reflects recent changes in favorites and upvotes.
Creators use s&box as a game development platform: they create game projects in the editor, build scenes and systems, and publish packages through sbox.game. They can update a package over time and reuse maps, libraries, assets, or other packages where it makes sense. The result is a mix of prototypes, multiplayer modes, remakes, experiments, and games built around one focused idea.
If you are looking for the best s&box games right now, start with live players, 24h peak, momentum, and Terry Score together. Terry Score is the closest quality signal on sbox.watch. It does not prove a game is good, but it helps separate widely liked packages from packages with weaker public feedback. The other signals answer different questions: which games are active now, which ones are gaining attention, and which ones have built up a base over time.