Compara los precios de Forgotten Seas en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Pangea Game Studios. Publicado por indie.io. Lanzado el 11/10/2025. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Action, Adventure, Indie, Simulation.

A naval survival sandbox with one genuinely clever trick up its sleeve: bottle your entire warship in your pocket, then uncork a broadside the moment pirates think they have easy prey.

I have a soft spot for systems that reward preparation over reaction, and Forgotten Seas scratches that itch in a way I did not expect from a two-person indie. The ship-in-a-bottle mechanic is the design hook that makes everything else cohere: every vessel from a nimble schooner to a 200-foot dreadnaught like the Justicar can be pocketed, redeployed on demand, and swapped mid-voyage depending on what threat or opportunity is in front of you. That one idea cascades into fleet management, ambush planning, and a constant cost-benefit calculation about which hull fits the current objective. For a genre that usually defaults to "build raft, survive, repeat," this is a meaningful point of difference. The interlocking loop underneath that hook is dense but accessible. Hunger and dehydration sit at the base layer, standard survival fare. Above that lives a naval combat system that actually rewards positioning: broadside angles matter, enemy ships actively maneuver to exploit gaps, and environmental hazards like storms, whirlpools, and sea creatures can turn a clean engagement into a scramble for survival. On land, a dual-wielding combat system keeps skirmishes fast-paced rather than methodical. The disappearing island mechanic is where tension peaks most consistently. The sea can literally reclaim an island while you are chest-deep in a treasure hunt, and the sprint back to shore before the ground vanishes beneath you creates a kind of pressure that most open-world survival games never bother with. Township building, farming, dock construction, and trade missions add a second track for players who prefer an economic game alongside the naval one. The 1.0 launch, which followed a community-shaped Early Access period starting in June 2024, also brought crew recruitment and management systems, meaning there is a meaningful late-game progression loop around crewing and upgrading ships rather than simply acquiring them. Community reception sits at a "Mostly Positive" band on Steam, and the criticisms are honest ones worth knowing before you commit. Some players flag repetitive resource loops and a map that currently feels smaller than the scope of the systems warranted. The UI draws complaints around inventory management and keybindings that are not fully remappable. A crash mid-pirate-battle that wiped a ship and left a player stranded with no manual save option surfaced in community discussions and points to the kind of rough edge you still sometimes encounter in small-team games post-1.0. The development team, notably a family operation of two, has been transparent and active in responding to feedback, which counts for something when evaluating longevity risk. Whether the content volume grows to match the ambition of the mechanics remains the open question. For anyone who actually enjoys the node of the survival-crafting genre where base-building, trade logistics, and combat planning overlap, Forgotten Seas offers more genuine decision-making than most of its peers. It is not the shiniest package on the shelf, and you will notice the budget in the UI and animation fidelity. But the core systems, particularly the fleet management and the way the disappearing island mechanic forces you off land at the worst possible moment, are design work that punches well above the studio's size. Play it in co-op if you can. The online co-op support means the trade mission juggling and pirate encounters scale up in ways that make the experience considerably richer than going it solo. Diego, Scout Team

Forgotten Seas

Forgotten Seas

11 oct 2025Pangea Game Studiosindie.io
GamerScout opina

A naval survival sandbox with one genuinely clever trick up its sleeve: bottle your entire warship in your pocket, then uncork a broadside the moment pirates think they have easy prey.

PC
Steam Deck Playable
Mejor precio disponible
€0.00
en N/A
Mínimo histórico: €4.11

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Acerca de Forgotten Seas

I have a soft spot for systems that reward preparation over reaction, and Forgotten Seas scratches that itch in a way I did not expect from a two-person indie. The ship-in-a-bottle mechanic is the design hook that makes everything else cohere: every vessel from a nimble schooner to a 200-foot dreadnaught like the Justicar can be pocketed, redeployed on demand, and swapped mid-voyage depending on what threat or opportunity is in front of you. That one idea cascades into fleet management, ambush planning, and a constant cost-benefit calculation about which hull fits the current objective. For a genre that usually defaults to "build raft, survive, repeat," this is a meaningful point of difference. The interlocking loop underneath that hook is dense but accessible. Hunger and dehydration sit at the base layer, standard survival fare. Above that lives a naval combat system that actually rewards positioning: broadside angles matter, enemy ships actively maneuver to exploit gaps, and environmental hazards like storms, whirlpools, and sea creatures can turn a clean engagement into a scramble for survival. On land, a dual-wielding combat system keeps skirmishes fast-paced rather than methodical. The disappearing island mechanic is where tension peaks most consistently. The sea can literally reclaim an island while you are chest-deep in a treasure hunt, and the sprint back to shore before the ground vanishes beneath you creates a kind of pressure that most open-world survival games never bother with. Township building, farming, dock construction, and trade missions add a second track for players who prefer an economic game alongside the naval one. The 1.0 launch, which followed a community-shaped Early Access period starting in June 2024, also brought crew recruitment and management systems, meaning there is a meaningful late-game progression loop around crewing and upgrading ships rather than simply acquiring them. Community reception sits at a "Mostly Positive" band on Steam, and the criticisms are honest ones worth knowing before you commit. Some players flag repetitive resource loops and a map that currently feels smaller than the scope of the systems warranted. The UI draws complaints around inventory management and keybindings that are not fully remappable. A crash mid-pirate-battle that wiped a ship and left a player stranded with no manual save option surfaced in community discussions and points to the kind of rough edge you still sometimes encounter in small-team games post-1.0. The development team, notably a family operation of two, has been transparent and active in responding to feedback, which counts for something when evaluating longevity risk. Whether the content volume grows to match the ambition of the mechanics remains the open question. For anyone who actually enjoys the node of the survival-crafting genre where base-building, trade logistics, and combat planning overlap, Forgotten Seas offers more genuine decision-making than most of its peers. It is not the shiniest package on the shelf, and you will notice the budget in the UI and animation fidelity. But the core systems, particularly the fleet management and the way the disappearing island mechanic forces you off land at the worst possible moment, are design work that punches well above the studio's size. Play it in co-op if you can. The online co-op support means the trade mission juggling and pirate encounters scale up in ways that make the experience considerably richer than going it solo.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Etiquetas

singleplayermultiplayercooponline-cooptier:indieNaval CombatFleet ManagementDisappearing IslandsCrew ManagementTrade MissionsPirate PvETownship BuildingPocket FleetTreasure Hunting

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 10 or later
Memory
12 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
5 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 960 4GB or similar
Processor
Intel Core i5-6600 / Ryzen 5 3500

Recomendados

OS
Windows 10 or later
Memory
16 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Storage
5 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 1060 or similar
Processor
Intel Core i5-8400 / AMD Ryzen 5 4500

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Pangea Game Studios
Distribuidora
indie.io
Fecha de lanzamiento
11 oct 2025

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Forgotten Seas?

Forgotten Seas está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Forgotten Seas?

Forgotten Seas se lanzó el 11 de octubre de 2025.

¿Quién desarrolló Forgotten Seas?

Forgotten Seas fue desarrollado por Pangea Game Studios y publicado por indie.io.