Sorry Bob drops you into a chaotic medical “nightmare” where confidence matters more than credentials. You step into the shaky hands of Nigel Burke, a completely unqualified “surgeon” whose only goal is to keep Bob alive using crude tools and blind optimism.

Gameplay: Surgery Gone Wrong
Sorry Bob unfolds from a first-person perspective — and you only control a single floating left hand above a defenseless patient. Each procedure assigns a transplant objective while the clock ticks and blood loss steadily pushes you toward failure. Tools slide, physics betray you, and even simple tasks spiral into chaos.
How Each Operation Works:
- Read the Objective
Identify the required organ and locate it in nearby containers before touching anything inside Bob’s fragile chest. - Break the Chest
Use heavy instruments to smash through the ribs carefully. One uncontrolled slip can cause instant blood loss. - Remove the Damaged Organ
Extract the failing organ cleanly and throw it aside to clear both space and visibility. - Insert the Replacement
Place the correct organ before blood loss reaches zero — or it’s game over.
Controls:
| Key / Action | Function |
|---|---|
| A | Control pinky finger |
| W | Control the ring finger |
| E | Control the middle finger |
| R | Control index finger |
| Spacebar | Control thumb |
| Mouse Move | Move the hand position |
| Left Click | Lower hand to grab |
| Right Click (Hold) | Rotate wrist |
Why This Game Feels Impossible
- One-handed control destroys natural coordination
- Finger-based key bindings punish muscle memory
- Slippery physics send tools sliding constantly