MOUSE: P.I. For Hire Reviews
Mouse: P.I. For Hire is one of those titles that works better than you think it would. Nailing the Doom-like gunplay and rubber-hose art style, it’s just as enjoyable to play as it is to look at. Plus, with a stellar cast, especially Troy Baker, it’s one of the most memorable shooters you can play. There are a few holes in it, like various glitches and repetitive elements, but it's a cheese worth taking a bite of.
Mouse: P.I. For Hire is more than just its visuals, with fast paced gunplay and fantastic movement packed into a single player FPS package.
We are faced with what we can consider the most charming game of 2026, one that isn't afraid to explore a genre as rigid as the first-person shooter and brings a lot of personality to a space where that is currently lacking. MOUSE: P.I. For Hire is a very welcome change of pace.
Review in Portuguese | Read full review
Mouse: P.I. For Hire is a shooter that wins you over through sheer personality. Fumi Games has crafted a world dripping with charm, from its rubberhose animation and original jazz soundtrack to death animations so creative they make you stop mid-firefight just to watch. The noir narrative keeps you guessing with constant twists, and Mouseburg feels like a place worth exploring even when everyone in it wants you dead. Where it stumbles is in its second half, as combat runs out of tricks and traversal abilities fail to deliver meaningful variety. Side missions are too scarce to matter, and the pacing loosens when it should tighten. But none of that erases the fact that this is one of the most distinctive and charming FPS experiences in years, a handcrafted love letter to noir, cartoons, and gaming itself that stays with you long after the credits roll.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
Mouse P.I. For Hire is charming, funny, fluid, and kept me smiling throughout. It demonstrates the power of passion in game development.
Unafraid to take risks, Mouse: P.I. For Hire revives the essence of classic noir through immersive and electrifying gameplay. While it presents occasional shortcomings in performance and narrative, the title shines with its visual originality and mechanics, establishing itself as a unique and indispensable experience in today’s gaming market. A true love letter to fans!
Review in Portuguese | Read full review
The Golden Age of Animation wasn’t called that for nothing, and MOUSE: P.I. For Hire is its modern gold standard following the likes of Cuphead and Bendy. Though relatively simple as a shooter and not up to par pacing-wise, this game has the production value and vision of yesteryear, and is a hand-made, hand-drawn testament to the art form of animation. Back it up with jazzy tunes and the best voice actors money can buy, and you’ve got another squash n’ stretch best-seller hot off the presses.
Mouse: P.I. for Hire shows how a clear vision and an offbeat personality can turn a boomer‑shooter homage into something sharper. Its 1930s aesthetic isn’t just flair—it’s the lens through which the game reshapes a well-worn genre, blending irresistible style, unexpectedly mature writing, and a protagonist who wins you over between gunfights and unpaid debts. Not everything lands perfectly, but the result is a game that knows exactly what it wants to be and delivers it with craft, rhythm, and charm. Jack Pepper won’t reinvent FPS games, but he certainly jolts them awake with passion, irony, and a world that smells of celluloid and aged cheese. So the real question is: are you ready to dive into his whirlwind of lead, jazz, and cheddar?
Review in Italian | Read full review
MOUSE: P.I. For Hire may excel in several aspects, as it succeeds in delivering a classic cartoon-style adventure filled with mystery and suspense that stays with you throughout the experience. This is supported by fast-paced and enjoyable gameplay with a nostalgic tone. However, it may be held back by some repetition in its activities.
Review in Arabic | Read full review
MOUSE: P.I. For Hire is a title that stands out for its art style and diverse mechanics, but the constant barrage of enemies every few moments might make the experience feel repetitive, pushing the investigation aspects into the background. At its core, it’s a first-person action shooter with investigative touches that remains fun throughout, offering around 12–15 hours of enjoyment.
Review in Spanish | Read full review
Mouse: P.I. For Hire features a gumshoe worth his salt. Every time I'd sit down to play it, I'd have a huge smile on my face, just like it was waking up to watch cartoons on Saturday morning (albeit a lot more violent). This game is an elite boomer shooter with witty writing, wonderful characters, and an affinity for the rubber-band style that's, sadly, been left behind by today's animation houses.
MOUSE: P.I. For Hire was worth the wait. The team at Fumi Games has matched their fantastic artwork with solid gameplay, great writing, and fantastic audio. Shooter fans are eating Gouda with this one
Mouse: P.I. For Hire is one of those rare games that feels fully formed, not just in its individual parts, but in how those parts come together. It’s a shooter, yes, but it’s also a character study, a stylistic experiment, and a love letter to a form of animation that rarely gets this kind of attention in games. It feels tailored for me, as a person, and it’s well worth the wait. By combining a strong narrative structure with expressive gameplay and a truly unique visual identity, it stands out in an increasingly crowded genre.
It's not always easy to hit a home run but Fumi Games hits the ball right out of the park with Mouse: P.I. For Hire.
Review in Dutch | Read full review
Just when I thought the first-person shooter genre had gone stale on me, MOUSE: P.I. For Hire walked in, tipped its hat, and changed my mind. This game won me over with its endless charm, its witty and genuinely cheesy dialogue — the cheese puns never stop, and I didn’t want them to — and a level of aesthetic commitment that extends to every corner of Mouseburg. A few structural quirks in the case sequencing keep it from a perfect score, but MOUSE: P.I. For Hire is a triumph — as close to perfect as it gets. Fumi Games has built a world that deserves to be explored, a story that earns its weight, and a combat system that keeps you coming back for one more run. At $29.99, this game is worth every cent.
Make no mistake: Mouse is a decent and occasionally fun experience. It will have a fiercely loyal cult following one day. It's just that its gameplay never lives up to the potential and superlative visual style.
While a few missions may seem a bit same-y and wear out their welcome, you're not going to find any first-person shooter as beautiful, as artistically focused, and thoughtfully laid-out as MOUSE: P.I For Hire.
One of those rare games that, once you finish it, you realize you won’t find anything quite like it. A combination of elements comes together to create a truly unique experience, led by its striking black-and-white artistic direction that perfectly captures the early 1900s aesthetic. It’s presented in a way we haven’t really seen before, making the game feel like a living, breathing classic cartoon.
Review in Arabic | Read full review
If I knew what I know now and wanted to buy MOUSE P.I. For Hire at full price, I wouldn’t have had to think twice. I’d instantly grab the physical Mouseburg Edition on PC and praise Fumi Games for letting me dive into such an interesting world for so little. Superb game!
Review in Polish | Read full review
MOUSE: P.I. For Hire offers an incredibly enjoyable experience that draws you in from start to finish with its distinctive noir atmosphere, stylish visuals, and gripping detective story. With its fun gameplay, powerful soundtrack, and memorable characters, it stands out as one of the most notable and absolutely must-play titles of recent times.
Review in Turkish | Read full review
