Wiseman: No More Breakups Brings Rhythm Boss Rush Drama to Steam

Solo developer Gilang Gumelar Studios from Indonesia has released the first demo on Steam for Wiseman: No More Breakups, an upcoming boss rush game about relationship drama, timed combat, and one very stressful train ride.

Available now for Windows and macOS, the demo gives players an early look at August Wiseman’s chaotic attempt to get his phone back after his girlfriend takes it. That simple setup quickly spirals into something much stranger, as August fights his way through people connected to her life.

A Moving Train Full of Relationship Chaos

Wiseman: No More Breakups takes place inside a moving train, where every boss encounter represents another piece of August and Megatron’s messy relationship. Players will face her best friend, family, exes, pet, and other unusual figures standing between August and his missing phone.

The premise is intentionally absurd, but the game is not only playing the situation for easy comedy. Each boss is designed to reveal more about the relationship itself, turning every fight into a strange extension of an argument that August may not be ready to properly understand.

Wiseman: No More Breakups Brings Rhythm Boss Rush Drama to Steam

Rhythm Combat Replaces Traditional Boss Rush Attacks

Rather than using rhythm inputs for dancing or score chasing, Wiseman: No More Breakups turns timing into direct combat. Players hit four button inputs in rhythm to attack, survive, and push through each encounter.

The demo includes three playable boss fights and three difficulty modes named Toddler, Teenager, and Wiseman. That gives players a way to test the game’s pressure at different levels, whether they want to focus on the story, sharpen their timing, or deal with the full boss rush challenge.

Jazz Fusion and Anime-Inspired Style Set the Tone

Visually, Wiseman: No More Breakups uses anime-inspired UI and comic book presentation to sell the heightened drama of its world. The result is a game that treats relationship conflict like a theatrical showdown, with each boss fight turning personal tension into spectacle.

Jazz fusion music also plays a key role in the game’s identity, supporting the strange, stylish, and slightly frantic tone of each fight. Combined with its moving train setting, the demo positions Wiseman: No More Breakups as a compact indie project built around a clear hook.

The full game is currently in development for PC and macOS via Steam. Gilang Gumelar Studios plans for it to be a short, replayable boss rush experience focused on rhythm-based combat, relationship comedy, and over-the-top emotional escalation.

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