Compara los precios de Survival Nation: Lost Horizon en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Wenkly Studio Sp. z o.o.. Publicado por indie.io. Lanzado el 15/4/2024. Disponible en PC, Linux. Géneros: Action, Adventure, Indie, RPG, Early Access.

A VR port turned open-world zombie survival RPG with co-op ambitions, three skill trees, and a Steam community sitting right on the fence at 56% positive.

I spent enough time with Lost Horizon to understand exactly what kind of game it wants to be, and enough time reading what the community has to say about what it actually is right now. The gap between those two things is real, and you should know about it going in. This is a top-down open-world zombie survival RPG built with scavenging, camp-building, hunger management, and group play at its centre. It grew out of Wenkly Studio's earlier VR title, Survival Nation, and the flatscreen adaptation carries both the ambition of the original and some of the friction you'd expect when a studio is actively retrofitting controls and quality-of-life features for a new platform. The loop has genuine bones. You build out your character across three skill trees: Combat, Survival, and Endurance. Each branch shapes a different relationship with the apocalypse. You can become the one who keeps the food coming, fishing and hunting animals and tending a camp garden, or focus your points on fighting and work toward taking down roaming boss zombies that drop rarer gear. There's gun customisation, weapon upgrading through an in-camp vendor, metal detecting for buried loot, and treasure maps that send you into more dangerous parts of the open world. Solo, private server, PvE co-op, and PvP modes are all present, which is a meaningful range for an Early Access title at this price tier. Here is where honesty matters more than cheerleading. The current Steam community is split almost down the middle, and the criticism isn't vague. Combat feel is the loudest complaint: melee enemies don't stagger on hit, which makes close-quarters fighting feel punishing in a way that reads like an oversight rather than a design choice. Some skill tree unlocks, like spending a point to earn bow proficiency or a small percentage chance to recover an arrow, have frustrated players who expect those things to feel meaningful rather than probabilistic. Cooking and eating animations are slow, crafting has no queue, and the random damage variance confuses more than it challenges. The developer's own Early Access notes acknowledge that quality-of-life features were intentionally absent from the VR build and are being added over time, which is at least transparent about the situation. That transparency earns some goodwill, but it doesn't patch the game today. What keeps me from dismissing it outright is that the structural idea is sound for a certain kind of player. If you have two or three friends who want a low-pressure co-op survival sandbox, the option to run a private server and ignore the PvP entirely gives you a reasonably calm space to build up a camp, send people out on different skill paths, and work toward those tougher mutant encounters together. The absence of item durability is a genuinely appreciated design call from more than a few players, a small mercy in a genre that often uses it as filler friction. There is real potential sitting inside this build. The question is whether Wenkly Studio has the runway and responsiveness to get there, and right now that answer is still being written. Wait for a few more update cycles unless you have a dedicated co-op group and tolerance for early-build roughness. Lone survivors will find better-polished alternatives in the same genre, but patient co-op players who want to track the development arc might find something worth checking in on. Kai, Scout Team

Survival Nation: Lost Horizon

Survival Nation: Lost Horizon

15 abr 2024Wenkly Studio Sp. z o.o.indie.io
GamerScout opina

A VR port turned open-world zombie survival RPG with co-op ambitions, three skill trees, and a Steam community sitting right on the fence at 56% positive.

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I spent enough time with Lost Horizon to understand exactly what kind of game it wants to be, and enough time reading what the community has to say about what it actually is right now. The gap between those two things is real, and you should know about it going in. This is a top-down open-world zombie survival RPG built with scavenging, camp-building, hunger management, and group play at its centre. It grew out of Wenkly Studio's earlier VR title, Survival Nation, and the flatscreen adaptation carries both the ambition of the original and some of the friction you'd expect when a studio is actively retrofitting controls and quality-of-life features for a new platform. The loop has genuine bones. You build out your character across three skill trees: Combat, Survival, and Endurance. Each branch shapes a different relationship with the apocalypse. You can become the one who keeps the food coming, fishing and hunting animals and tending a camp garden, or focus your points on fighting and work toward taking down roaming boss zombies that drop rarer gear. There's gun customisation, weapon upgrading through an in-camp vendor, metal detecting for buried loot, and treasure maps that send you into more dangerous parts of the open world. Solo, private server, PvE co-op, and PvP modes are all present, which is a meaningful range for an Early Access title at this price tier. Here is where honesty matters more than cheerleading. The current Steam community is split almost down the middle, and the criticism isn't vague. Combat feel is the loudest complaint: melee enemies don't stagger on hit, which makes close-quarters fighting feel punishing in a way that reads like an oversight rather than a design choice. Some skill tree unlocks, like spending a point to earn bow proficiency or a small percentage chance to recover an arrow, have frustrated players who expect those things to feel meaningful rather than probabilistic. Cooking and eating animations are slow, crafting has no queue, and the random damage variance confuses more than it challenges. The developer's own Early Access notes acknowledge that quality-of-life features were intentionally absent from the VR build and are being added over time, which is at least transparent about the situation. That transparency earns some goodwill, but it doesn't patch the game today. What keeps me from dismissing it outright is that the structural idea is sound for a certain kind of player. If you have two or three friends who want a low-pressure co-op survival sandbox, the option to run a private server and ignore the PvP entirely gives you a reasonably calm space to build up a camp, send people out on different skill paths, and work toward those tougher mutant encounters together. The absence of item durability is a genuinely appreciated design call from more than a few players, a small mercy in a genre that often uses it as filler friction. There is real potential sitting inside this build. The question is whether Wenkly Studio has the runway and responsiveness to get there, and right now that answer is still being written. Wait for a few more update cycles unless you have a dedicated co-op group and tolerance for early-build roughness. Lone survivors will find better-polished alternatives in the same genre, but patient co-op players who want to track the development arc might find something worth checking in on.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayermultiplayercooponline-coopachievementscloud-savestier:indieVR PortCamp ManagementSkill Tree BuildsPrivate ServerPvE Co-opBoss HuntingOpen World SurvivalGun Customization

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
Storage
8 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GTX 1060
Processor
Intel Core i5-8600k

Recomendados

OS
Windows 10
Memory
16 GB RAM
Storage
10 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia RTX 2060
Processor
Intel Core i7-9700K

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Wenkly Studio Sp. z o.o.
Distribuidora
indie.io
Fecha de lanzamiento
15 abr 2024

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Survival Nation: Lost Horizon?

Survival Nation: Lost Horizon está disponible en PC, Linux.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Survival Nation: Lost Horizon?

Survival Nation: Lost Horizon se lanzó el 15 de abril de 2024.

¿Quién desarrolló Survival Nation: Lost Horizon?

Survival Nation: Lost Horizon fue desarrollado por Wenkly Studio Sp. z o.o. y publicado por indie.io.