Tap Tap Loot Release Countdown: Exact Date & Time

Tap Tap Loot Release Countdown: Exact Date & Time

I stared at the SteamDB timer and felt a tiny, electrical thrill—this is the moment a new release can tilt your whole morning. My excitement was like a metronome clicking faster. You know the sting of missing a launch by minutes; I’ve been there.

Release windows compress attention: Tap Tap Loot release countdown

I checked the developer posts and SteamDB so you don’t have to. Tap Tap Loot will release globally on Monday, April 13, a date confirmed by Turtle Knight Games and unlikely to change.

Hurry Up!

The launch times listed on SteamDB correspond to these windows:

  • 3am PT
  • 5am CT
  • 6am ET
  • 11am UTC
  • 12pm CET

I’ll update the guide if Turtle Knight Games or Steam shifts anything; for now those timestamps are what SteamDB shows.

When is Tap Tap Loot released on Steam?

It goes live on Monday, April 13. Steam’s store page and the developer posts line up with SteamDB’s scheduling, which is usually reliable for PC launches.

What time does Tap Tap Loot go live in my timezone?

Use the times above or plug the April 13 date into Steam, SteamDB, or a timezone converter like WorldTimeBuddy. I prefer checking SteamDB and the Steam store simultaneously so you can see both the release metadata and the storefront listing.

Is there a free demo for Tap Tap Loot?

Yes — you can try the free demo on Steam right now to test the feel and pacing before release. I recommend jumping in if you want a hands-on sense of the click-and-type rhythm.

Simple inputs, fast feedback: What to expect from Tap Tap Loot

Games that reward small actions tend to keep you engaged, and Tap Tap Loot leans hard into that principle. You play as a cat hero whose progress is tied to clicks and keystrokes; every tap nudges stats and gear growth forward.

No two heroes are identical. There are roughly 200 unique items, multiple classes, and different weapons to mix and match, so you decide how the character develops across runs.

Enemies appear across six distinct biomes; some fights are trivial, others demand timing and positioning. Combat is like a quick puzzle, where your fingers and the keyboard race to keep pace.

If you want company, the game supports up to four-player co-op so you can split challenges and loot. And if you’re not ready to buy, the free Steam demo gives a reliable preview of build variety and pacing.

I’ve watched small teams (Turtle Knight Games) use Steam, SteamDB, Discord, and Twitch clips to build momentum before launch; if you follow their channels you’ll catch developer notes and live reactions in real time. Will you be watching the countdown or sleeping through another missed drop?

You can try the free demo on Steam here: Tap Tap Loot demo on Steam.