Virtually Impossible vs One More Roll
Virtually Impossible and One More Roll both land in Action, Indie, Simulation 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, Simulation on Steam. Virtually Impossible (2017) is 1 year older than One More Roll (2018). One More Roll scores higher on Steam reviews (95.5% positive) than Virtually Impossible (41.7% positive). No login or purchase needed — scroll for the full table, the verdict FAQ, and links to ranked similar games for both titles.
Side-by-side comparison
Virtually Impossible | One More Roll | |
|---|---|---|
| Released | 2017 | 2018 |
| Genres | Action, Indie, Adventure, Simulation, Casual, Racing | Action, Indie, Simulation, Casual, Early Access, Racing |
| Platforms | Windows | Windows |
| Steam Deck | Unrated | Unrated |
| Price | 9.99 USD | 11.99 USD |
| Steam reviews | 41.7% positive (12 reviews) | 95.5% positive (22 reviews) |
| Multiplayer | Multi-player | Multi-player |
| Developers | Growl Interactive | PapayaDev |
Side by side
- Both share Action, Indie, Simulation on Steam.
- Virtually Impossible (2017) is 1 year older than One More Roll (2018).
- One More Roll scores higher on Steam reviews (95.5% positive) than Virtually Impossible (41.7% positive).
- Virtually Impossible is currently ~17% cheaper on Steam than One More Roll (9.99 USD vs. 11.99 USD).
Virtually Impossible vs One More Roll — FAQ
- Should I play Virtually Impossible or One More Roll first?
- If you want chronology, Virtually Impossible (2017) came out before One More Roll (2018). 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 Virtually Impossible and One More Roll similar?
- They overlap on Action, Indie, Simulation 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.

