How to Fix SPINS PH Issues and Optimize Your Gaming Performance
I remember the first time I fired up Squirrel With a Gun, expecting some lighthearted rodent-themed chaos. What I got instead was my character falling through the floor during the very first boss fight. There I was, ready to take down this oversized enemy, when suddenly the ground vanished beneath my feet. This wasn't some clever game mechanic - this was the SPINS PH issue rearing its ugly head. If you're experiencing similar problems, you're definitely not alone. The game has some serious technical hurdles that can make playing feel more like debugging than gaming.
Let me walk you through what I've discovered after spending about 15 hours with this game across multiple play sessions. That floor-falling glitch I mentioned? It happened to me at least three times during that initial boss encounter alone. Each time, I had to restart the entire fight from scratch. The most bizarre bug occurred during what should have been a crucial story moment - my squirrel protagonist simply failed to appear in a cutscene. The camera panned around an empty environment while dialogue played to nobody. The game was essentially broken at that point, forcing a complete restart and costing me about 20 minutes of progress.
Performance optimization is another major headache. For a game that doesn't exactly push graphical boundaries, it certainly demands more than it should from your system. On my RTX 3060 setup, which handles much more visually impressive games without breaking a sweat, I had to drop several settings to medium just to maintain a stable 60 FPS. Even then, I experienced two complete crashes to desktop during my playthrough - once while entering a new area and another during a particularly intense combat sequence. The frame rate would occasionally tank to what felt like 15-20 FPS for no apparent reason, especially in areas with multiple enemies.
What's particularly frustrating is that these technical issues overshadow what could be a genuinely fun experience. Between the bugs and performance problems, there's another layer of annoyance - the audio design. The game features what I'd estimate to be only about 5-6 total music tracks that loop endlessly. By my second hour of playing, I found myself actually muting the game audio and putting on my own music instead. The repetition becomes genuinely grating, especially during longer play sessions where you might hear the same 90-second track a dozen times.
Now, here's what I've learned about mitigating these problems. First, always keep multiple save files - I recommend saving at least every 15-20 minutes to different slots. This saved me hours of potential replay time when that cutscene bug struck. For performance, I found that turning down shadow quality and post-processing effects provided the biggest FPS boost with the least visual impact. I also discovered that limiting the frame rate to 60 FPS actually made the game feel more stable than letting it run wild. Some players in forums have reported success with updating specific drivers, though your mileage may vary.
The strange thing about Squirrel With a Gun is that beneath all these technical shortcomings, there's actually a decent game trying to get out. The core shooting mechanics feel satisfying when they work properly, and the premise is undeniably charming. But the current technical state makes it hard to recommend without serious caveats. I'd estimate that about 30% of my playtime was affected by some kind of bug or performance issue - that's just too high for a released product.
If you're determined to push through despite these problems, my advice is to approach it with patience and plenty of backup saves. The developers have released two minor patches since launch, so there's hope that the worst issues might be addressed eventually. But as it stands, you're essentially signing up to be a beta tester rather than just a player. Sometimes the game works beautifully for stretches, and those moments remind you why you picked it up in the first place. Other times, you'll be restarting for the third time because your squirrel decided to phase through reality itself. It's a mixed bag, but at least it's never boring - even when the boredom would be preferable to dealing with another crash.