Last Man Sitting is out now on PC, with Raw Fury and developer DoubleMoose launching the roguelite action shooter for players ready to blast through waves of hostile office appliances while rolling around in an office chair.
Priced at $9.99, Last Man Sitting mixes third-person shooting, melee attacks, movement-based combat, and roguelite upgrades into a game that looks intentionally stupid in the right way. The setup is simple: survive the office, kill everything in your way, and do it all while seated.
A roguelite shooter built around office chair combat
The main hook in Last Man Sitting is obvious and ridiculous enough to work. Players fight through waves of sentient office equipment using guns, abilities, and chair-based movement in a style Raw Fury describes as inspired by early 2000s games.
That kind of tone can go stale fast if the combat is weak, but the basic pitch makes sense. Last Man Sitting is going for speed, noise, and chaos rather than slickness or seriousness. If the movement feels good, the office chair angle could make the whole thing stand out more than the average low-cost roguelite shooter.
The game supports both single-player and co-op multiplayer, which feels like the better fit for something this frantic.
Power-ups, builds, and chair upgrades drive progression
Like most roguelites, Last Man Sitting leans on repeated runs and flexible build options. Players can level up, draft from more than 200 power-ups, and unlock synergies that shape how each run develops.
There is also room to customize loadouts with different weapons, abilities, and chair upgrades, which is either a very dumb phrase or a very good one depending on your tolerance for this game’s whole deal. Either way, it gives the game a progression loop beyond just surviving longer.
That matters because novelty only gets a game so far. The office-chair joke gets people in the door, but the upgrade system is what keeps the game alive after the first few runs.
PvP and paid DLC are available at launch
Alongside the main roguelite mode, Last Man Sitting also includes a PvP arena mode built around a four-player king-of-the-hill setup. That feels like an extra rather than the main attraction, but it could give players another reason to stick around if the combat systems hold up.
Raw Fury also launched the Sit in Style paid DLC pack on day one. It adds two cosmetic designs that change the visual and audio effects for chairs, weapons, and equipped abilities. The game’s original soundtrack is also being sold separately, and a First Day Deluxe Bundle packages together the base game, DLC, and soundtrack.









































































