Welcome to Repeater Records, where we flip sleeves, spin clues and rek – rek – recommend the very best records! As the new kid in charge of the store, you gotta understand the ground rules:
Rule One: The Customer Is Never Right – But You Are!
The customers of Repeater Records are an eccentric, indecisive bunch. Each and every one of them is after that ONE perfect record, and it’s up to you Wax Heads to read the vibe and find it for them!
Rule Two: Learn Your Divas From Your Beatniks!
Did Scandinavian metal band Jarhead really murder their singer and put his head in a jar? Is it true Kerri Krow only sings when brushing her teeth? Has anyone actually ever seen Mimi? With over 50+ records and dozens of musical acts, there’s a lot to learn and love as an aspiring Wax Head.
Rule Three: Don’t Get Lost!
Repeater Records has twists and turns, surprises and secrets, arcades and TV’s, posters and zines. It’s easy to get lost and distracted while looking for the right record – just don’t forget the clients, eh?
Gupscore: Category: Management, Point and Click
Wax Heads is where you work as a manager for a struggling punk record store. You talk to customers who have specific tastes and requests in music, you give your recommendations and funny enough, every recommendation comes with a price. Like you’re literally checking the records out before you know if the customer likes it or no. Planned to release this 2026, this game
This is a pretty simple game with fun Pepper Ann kind of graphics which I love, love, love. In the playthrough you get a choice of a few records to play and the music have varying genres and moods. I’m not really great at describing music but the music available are alright. You also get a mini-game dungeon crawler where I’m sure there’s probably an achievement for completing that. Oh you can also customize the poster by adding stickers–did not make any sense but was fun nonetheless.
I’m not sure if this is a me-problem, but some characters asking for requests are either in your face “I know what I want”, and then there’s the “I–uhm–I forgot”, and I’m like “How the hell am I getting you what you want, lady? Get your shit together lol” I guess I needed to read into the other non-obvious clues available. It’s not as simple as it looks like and it’s either those are added to add challenge or to add randomness (coz y’know people don’t always know what they want and apparently it’s the store manager’s problem).
It is pretty easy to get lost in the record store ngl which is a major rule breaker per game description lol. I’m not a person to enjoy games that include remembering where you came from and where to go exactly, and the directions are something to get used to. Again, a me-problem. This is a pretty alright game I must say and the charm is perfect for audiophiles.
Final verdict: Imma put this in the bin unless someone pays me to play.


