Built Different (AppID: 2114960)
Type: game
Genre: Action, Adventure, Casual, Indie, Racing
Developer: JelloGames
Publisher: JelloGames
Release Date: Sep 2022
Built Different: A Fresh Take on 3D Platforming Adventure
Built Different has 0 current players. Currently priced at $0.08, it represents yellow value compared to similar Action games.
Total Players
0
Price
$0.08
Genre
Action
Developer
JelloGames
Media Gallery
Screenshots
And 3 more screenshots...
Videos
Built Different
Game Insights
Buy Verdict
Watch — $7.99.
Decent deal at 0% off, but might drop further. Watch for better opportunities.
▲
~20 days until next sale
Community Sentiment
Mixed Positive — score 33/100.
Top praised area: gameplay (0 positive mentions).
▬
Stable
Value Score
Fair Value — 88th percentile.
Price-to-player ratio ranks in the 88th percentile. Priced as Premium at $7.99.
▲
Premium pricing tier
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Built Different worth buying right now?
Watch — $7.99. Decent deal at 0% off, but might drop further. Watch for better opportunities.
When does Built Different go on sale?
Decent deal at 0% off, but might drop further. Watch for better opportunities.
What do players think of Built Different?
Mixed Positive — score 33/100. Top praised area: gameplay (0 positive mentions).
Genre Benchmarks
Value Ratio
Top 12%
Price History
Lowest Price
$0.08
May 2026 across all regions
Current Price
$0.08
US region
Loading price chart...
Price history across regions (last 30 days)
System Requirements
Platform Support
Windows
Windows Requirements
Minimum:
Minimum:
- Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
- OS *: Windows 7 SP1 with Platform Update for Windows 7
- Processor: Intel i5-2550K, 3.4 GHz
- Memory: 4 GB RAM
- Graphics: GeForce GTX 670 | Radeon HD 7950
- DirectX: Version 11
- Storage: 4 GB available space
Recommended:
Recommended:
- Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
- OS: Windows 10 version 14393.102 or higher
- Processor: Intel Core i7-3770, 3.4 GHz
- Memory: 16 GB RAM
- Graphics: GeForce GTX 970 or GeForce GTX 1060 | Radeon R9 290X or Radeon RX 480
- Storage: 4 MB available space
Controller Support
full
Pricing
Paid Game
CDN$ 8.99 (CAD)
Additional Information
Categories
Single-player
Full controller support
Family Sharing
Tags
3D
3D Platformer
Action
Action Roguelike
Adventure
Artificial Intelligence
Cartoon
Cartoony
Casual
Colorful
+10 more
Supported Languages
English*, French, Italian, German, Spanish - Spain, Bulgarian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Greek, Hungarian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Romanian, Russian, Simplified Chinese, Swedish, Turkish, Ukrainian
*languages with full audio support
*languages with full audio support
Current Pricing
💰
CDN$ 8.99
Regular Price
Historical low: $0.08
(May 2026)
Additional Information
🇧🇷
DEJUS Rating
l
Brazilian rating
🇩🇪
Steam Germany
0
German classification
🆘
Support
🎁
Purchase Options
1
package options
Developer Analytics
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About This Game
A short 3D platformer with a Rich story and a fun gameplay and challenging puzzle --Full controller support
Detailed Description
A short 3D platformer with a Rich story and a fun gameplay and challenging puzzle
--Full controller support
------------------The Story------------------
Aldar was a technologist. Like any good technologist in the Proxima Centauri planetary system, he didn’t invent anything himself. Instead, Aldar stole ideas from others and used his massive fortune to hire brilliant technicians and engineers to do the hard work for him. This made him even richer, of course.
Over the past thirty years, he created several companies: One sold solar powered hover cars, another used graviton tipped drills to dig massive holes in the planet, and a third sent tens of thousands of satellites into space to create the largest advertising network in the known universe. This made Aldar influential beyond his wildest dreams. Everyone on the planet knew his name.
Anything that got in Aldar’s way became an acquisition. As it turned out, almost everyone had their price. New technologies were either absorbed or stifled by his empire, depending on whether or not they fit in with his ‘grand vision’.
But there was one thing that Aldar couldn’t buy: His mother’s precious digital painting, ‘The Silly Clown’.
The Silly Clown was a TFN - Totally Fungible Nonsense. TFNs were methods of laying claim to pieces of artwork in the least efficient way possible.
So even though there were hundreds of thousands of copies of the badly drawn 2D clown picture all over GalacticNet, Aldar’s mother could legitimately say that she owned the original!
The creation of The Silly Clown was a complete accident. A digital artist once kept his basic paint program open overnight, and then fell asleep on his writing tablet. As he tossed and turned, his face rubbed over the device. When he woke up in the morning, he was staring at a primitive image of a badly painted clown.
Or maybe someone hired a freelance artist to spend four minutes doodling something awful. It’s hard to say.
Either way The Silly Clown took GalacticNet by storm. It became the meme of the year. Everyone was reposting their own edited versions of The Silly Clown doing all kinds of activities, hanging in the finest art galleries, and posing next to the biggest stars. But the next year, a driving dog became the next big thing, and The Silly Clown was mostly forgotten.
But not by Aldar. He tried every possible legal trick, scam, and even resorted to emotional blackmail in order to try to wrest The Silly Clown from his mother’s hands. She finally got so sick of her own son that she encoded the TFN onto a holographic crystal. Then she built the most heavily guarded, highly automated facility in the world in order to protect it. In her will, she said that The Silly Clown should be immediately destroyed upon her passing, to make sure that her obsessed son didn’t try anything drastic.
That meant if Aldar wanted to own the majesty of The Silly Clown… he would need to steal it.
--Full controller support
------------------The Story------------------
Aldar was a technologist. Like any good technologist in the Proxima Centauri planetary system, he didn’t invent anything himself. Instead, Aldar stole ideas from others and used his massive fortune to hire brilliant technicians and engineers to do the hard work for him. This made him even richer, of course.
Over the past thirty years, he created several companies: One sold solar powered hover cars, another used graviton tipped drills to dig massive holes in the planet, and a third sent tens of thousands of satellites into space to create the largest advertising network in the known universe. This made Aldar influential beyond his wildest dreams. Everyone on the planet knew his name.
Anything that got in Aldar’s way became an acquisition. As it turned out, almost everyone had their price. New technologies were either absorbed or stifled by his empire, depending on whether or not they fit in with his ‘grand vision’.
But there was one thing that Aldar couldn’t buy: His mother’s precious digital painting, ‘The Silly Clown’.
The Silly Clown was a TFN - Totally Fungible Nonsense. TFNs were methods of laying claim to pieces of artwork in the least efficient way possible.
So even though there were hundreds of thousands of copies of the badly drawn 2D clown picture all over GalacticNet, Aldar’s mother could legitimately say that she owned the original!
The creation of The Silly Clown was a complete accident. A digital artist once kept his basic paint program open overnight, and then fell asleep on his writing tablet. As he tossed and turned, his face rubbed over the device. When he woke up in the morning, he was staring at a primitive image of a badly painted clown.
Or maybe someone hired a freelance artist to spend four minutes doodling something awful. It’s hard to say.
Either way The Silly Clown took GalacticNet by storm. It became the meme of the year. Everyone was reposting their own edited versions of The Silly Clown doing all kinds of activities, hanging in the finest art galleries, and posing next to the biggest stars. But the next year, a driving dog became the next big thing, and The Silly Clown was mostly forgotten.
But not by Aldar. He tried every possible legal trick, scam, and even resorted to emotional blackmail in order to try to wrest The Silly Clown from his mother’s hands. She finally got so sick of her own son that she encoded the TFN onto a holographic crystal. Then she built the most heavily guarded, highly automated facility in the world in order to protect it. In her will, she said that The Silly Clown should be immediately destroyed upon her passing, to make sure that her obsessed son didn’t try anything drastic.
That meant if Aldar wanted to own the majesty of The Silly Clown… he would need to steal it.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many people are playing Built Different right now?
There are currently no active players of Built Different on Steam.
How does Built Different’s pricing compare to similar indie games?
It is priced at just $0.08 making it highly affordable compared to typical indie titles.
Who develops and publishes Built Different?
Both development and publishing are handled by JelloGames.
What makes this game unique among its genres?
Its compact size combines rich storytelling with challenging puzzle mechanics while offering full controller support across Action, Adventure, Casual, Indie & Racing themes.
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