Live
Mouse: P.I. for Hire Is Out — Noir Shooter Charms But Stumbles at the Seams·Bloodborne Gets an R-Rated Animated Film — JackSepticEye Is Producing It·Pragmata Reviewed: Capcom's Sci-Fi Shooter Is Blunt, Bold, and Surprisingly Fun·Metro 2039 Is Real — First Impressions of 4A's Next Underground Epic·Gigabyte GO27Q24G Review: Budget WOLED With a Catch·Jet Set Sekiro: This Mod Turns FromSoft's Hardest Game Into a Skate Sim·Fire Force Season 3: The Wildest Shōnen Anime of the Decade Takes Its Final Bow·The Looter-Shooter Was Born From Failure: How Destiny Learned From Borderlands' Mistakes·Crimson Desert: Sanctuary of Renunciation — How to Purify It Without Losing Your Mind·Crimson Desert: Sanctuary of Renunciation — How to Purify It Without Losing Your Mind·Mouse: P.I. for Hire Is Out — Noir Shooter Charms But Stumbles at the Seams·Bloodborne Gets an R-Rated Animated Film — JackSepticEye Is Producing It·Pragmata Reviewed: Capcom's Sci-Fi Shooter Is Blunt, Bold, and Surprisingly Fun·Metro 2039 Is Real — First Impressions of 4A's Next Underground Epic·Gigabyte GO27Q24G Review: Budget WOLED With a Catch·Jet Set Sekiro: This Mod Turns FromSoft's Hardest Game Into a Skate Sim·Fire Force Season 3: The Wildest Shōnen Anime of the Decade Takes Its Final Bow·The Looter-Shooter Was Born From Failure: How Destiny Learned From Borderlands' Mistakes·Crimson Desert: Sanctuary of Renunciation — How to Purify It Without Losing Your Mind·Crimson Desert: Sanctuary of Renunciation — How to Purify It Without Losing Your Mind·
NewsPC· First-Person Shooter

Mouse: P.I. for Hire Is Out — Noir Shooter Charms But Stumbles at the Seams

Mouse: P.I. for Hire has officially landed, blending 1930s cartoon noir aesthetics with old-school FPS mechanics. The concept is undeniably sharp — a wise-cracking rodent detective blazing through gangster dens with a Tommy gun — but early reception suggests the game's two core ambitions don't always pull in the same direction. Here's what we know about the launch and why this one is worth watching despite its rough edges.

L

Lumnix Editorial

·4 min read
Mouse: P.I. for Hire Is Out — Noir Shooter Charms But Stumbles at the Seams

A Detective Mouse With a Big Gun and a Complicated Launch

Mouse: P.I. for Hire dropped this week to a mixed but genuinely curious reception. Developed by Fumi Games, the title pitches itself as a love letter to both the rubber-hose animation era and the hard-charging, movement-heavy shooters of the mid-1990s. That's a bold cocktail — and by most early accounts, it's one that tastes interesting but doesn't always go down smooth.

The premise is exactly what it sounds like: you play a hard-boiled mouse private investigator navigating a city crawling with crooked cats, corrupt politicians, and enough shadow to fill a film noir anthology. Mechanically, it's a boomer shooter — fast movement, arena-style encounters, a generous arsenal, and zero hand-holding. Visually, it commits hard to its animated influences, rendering every frame like a Fleischer Studios short that somehow got a gun license.

Where the Concept Shines — and Where It Cracks

The aesthetic work is the game's undeniable high point. Fumi Games clearly poured serious effort into making the world feel cohesive: environments are expressive, enemy designs are inventive, and the color palette does real work in building atmosphere. When Mouse is firing on all cylinders — pun intended — it delivers the kind of distinctive visual identity most indie shooters can only dream of.

The friction shows up at the intersection of tone and pacing. Noir storytelling, by its nature, asks players to slow down, absorb dialogue, and sit with atmosphere. Boomer shooter design, equally by its nature, rewards aggression, momentum, and relentless forward motion. Mouse tries to honor both traditions simultaneously, and the result is a game that occasionally feels like it's arguing with itself. Cutscenes interrupt combat flow at awkward intervals, and the narrative's ambitions sometimes feel undercut by levels clearly designed to keep your trigger finger busy rather than your brain engaged.

That said, the shooting itself is reportedly solid — responsive, weighty, and varied enough to stay engaging across the game's runtime. The arsenal leans into period-appropriate weapons with enough creative liberty to keep things from feeling like a history lesson.

The Indie FPS Landscape and Where Mouse Fits

Mouse: P.I. for Hire enters a genuinely crowded corner of the market. The boomer shooter revival has produced some standout entries over the past few years — games that prove the formula still has bite when executed with conviction. Mouse doesn't unseat the genre's current heavy hitters, but it occupies a niche none of them are chasing: the stylized, story-forward, personality-driven end of the spectrum.

For players who bounced off more austere, combat-pure shooters, Mouse might actually be the more welcoming entry point — even if the narrative scaffolding isn't as sturdy as it should be. The game has charm in abundance, and charm counts for something in a genre that can trend toward the grimly utilitarian.

Fumi Games is a small studio, and Mouse represents a significant creative swing. The ambition is visible in every frame. Whether that ambition fully lands is a different conversation — but it's the kind of ambition worth encouraging, even when the execution leaves room to grow.

What's Next for Mouse

Post-launch support details remain limited at this stage. Fumi Games hasn't announced a concrete roadmap, though community feedback is already circulating around a handful of recurring points: level design consistency, narrative pacing, and some technical roughness on specific configurations. Whether the studio moves quickly to address these will say a lot about the game's long-term standing.

For now, Mouse: P.I. for Hire is available on PC. It's the kind of release that deserves a closer look — not a blind buy, but absolutely worth keeping on your radar if the premise speaks to you. A game this committed to its own weird identity is, at minimum, more interesting than half the genre's output this year.