IMHO.

Rogue Shapes vs BoomScroll

Rogue Shapes and BoomScroll both land in Action, Indie on Steam, which is why they keep getting compared. The comparison below is built from each game's Steam metadata — release year, genres, categories, Steam Deck status, price, and review score — refreshed daily by imho.run's scraper. Headline differences: Both share Action, Indie on Steam. Rogue Shapes (2025) is 1 year older than BoomScroll (2026). No login or purchase needed — scroll for the full table, the verdict FAQ, and links to ranked similar games for both titles.

Which should you pick?

Choose Rogue Shapes

Choose Rogue Shapes if you want a Casual experience. Rogue Shapes launched in 2025.

Choose BoomScroll

Choose BoomScroll if you want an Adventure and RPG game with Camera Comfort and Stereo Sound. BoomScroll launched in 2026.

Both Rogue Shapes and BoomScroll sit in Action and Indie on Steam and both list Color Alternatives, Custom Volume Controls, and Playable without Timed Input, so either pick lands in the same broad neighborhood. Use the side-by-side table for the feature view, or follow the "Games like" links below to see ranked alternatives for either title.

Side-by-side comparison

Rogue Shapes vs BoomScroll — Steam metadata comparison
Rogue Shapes — Steam game coverRogue ShapesBoomScroll — Steam game coverBoomScroll
Released20252026
GenresAction, Indie, CasualAction, Indie, Adventure, RPG
PlatformsWindowsWindows, macOS, Linux
Steam DeckUnratedUnrated
Price1.99 USDPrice unknown
Steam reviews3 reviews
MultiplayerSingle-player onlySingle-player only
DevelopersVacantknight5Toiu

Side by side

Rogue Shapes vs BoomScroll — FAQ

Should I play Rogue Shapes or BoomScroll first?
If you want chronology, Rogue Shapes (2025) came out before BoomScroll (2026). If neither is a sequel to the other, order doesn't really matter — start with whichever fits your current mood, since both share enough on Steam to make either a reasonable opener.
Are Rogue Shapes and BoomScroll similar?
They overlap on Action, Indie on Steam, so the catalogue groups them together — but "similar" depends on the specific mechanics. Use the genre + category rows above to decide whether the overlap matches what drew you to the one you've already played.