Compare AEGYPTUS prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by L.C.. Published by JustPlayNow. Released on 8/15/2017. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie, Simulation, Early Access.

Stranded in an Egyptian desert with a dehydration meter ticking down and pyramid traps waiting ahead, AEGYPTUS is a scrappy solo-dev Early Access experiment that wears its ambition more clearly than its execution.

I track a lot of Early Access releases, and the ones that worry me most are not the ones that overpromise, but the ones where the gap between vision and current build is too wide to ignore. AEGYPTUS, a solo-developer project from L.C., sits firmly in that category. The core pitch is genuinely interesting: a three-phase Egyptian survival-adventure that shifts gameplay modes as you progress, starting in an open-world desert, then dropping you into dungeon-crawling pyramid interiors, then pivoting again into a trap-escape sequence. Three distinct mechanical gears in one package is an ambitious target for any team, let alone a single developer. The desert survival layer asks you to manage dehydration by hunting for water springs, navigate using real-time footprints left in the terrain so you do not loop yourself into the sand, and solve a set of eight environmental puzzles to unlock pyramid access. The torch mechanic, charged with batteries, handles the day-night cycle in a way that at least adds a resource-management decision. Once inside the pyramid, the game pivots hard into trap-avoidance dungeon running, with Egyptian gods Anubis and Horus serving as adversarial forces trying to cut off your escape. On paper, that layered structure has genuine appeal for players who like their survival loops gated behind puzzle gates rather than pure resource grind. The problem is execution and project health. Steam reviews sit at a mixed rating across roughly fifteen votes, which is a small sample but not an encouraging one. The game entered Early Access in August 2017 with a stated full-release window that came and went, and the last recorded patch landed in early 2018. The developer's planned content list, including three fully trapped pyramid dungeons and a hand-drawn black-and-white comic narrative, appears to remain incomplete years later. Community forum posts flagged survival mechanics that did not behave consistently, including a water-collection system that confused early players. For a game built around resource scarcity, unreliable survival systems are a structural problem, not a surface bug. The aesthetic direction is one of the few areas worth a genuine nod. The hand-drawn comic-style storytelling, rendered in black and white, is an unusual choice for the genre and gives the project a distinct visual personality that a bigger-budget Egyptian title would never attempt. First-person and third-person camera toggle is also present and functional. But personality alone does not carry a game that stalled in pre-alpha, and with no evidence of ongoing development since 2018, buyers today are purchasing a time capsule of an abandoned Early Access build, not a living product. If you are the type who digs through dormant Early Access libraries for rough-but-real solo-developer projects with an interesting structural idea, AEGYPTUS will give you something to poke at for an afternoon. Everyone else, and especially anyone expecting a polished Egyptian puzzle-survival experience, should look elsewhere. The bones of an interesting three-act survival loop are here. The house was never finished. Diego, Scout Team

AEGYPTUS
ActionAdventureIndieSimulationEarly Access

AEGYPTUS

Aug 15, 2017L.C.JustPlayNow
GamerScout Says

Stranded in an Egyptian desert with a dehydration meter ticking down and pyramid traps waiting ahead, AEGYPTUS is a scrappy solo-dev Early Access experiment that wears its ambition more clearly than its execution.

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Screenshots & Media

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About AEGYPTUS

I track a lot of Early Access releases, and the ones that worry me most are not the ones that overpromise, but the ones where the gap between vision and current build is too wide to ignore. AEGYPTUS, a solo-developer project from L.C., sits firmly in that category. The core pitch is genuinely interesting: a three-phase Egyptian survival-adventure that shifts gameplay modes as you progress, starting in an open-world desert, then dropping you into dungeon-crawling pyramid interiors, then pivoting again into a trap-escape sequence. Three distinct mechanical gears in one package is an ambitious target for any team, let alone a single developer. The desert survival layer asks you to manage dehydration by hunting for water springs, navigate using real-time footprints left in the terrain so you do not loop yourself into the sand, and solve a set of eight environmental puzzles to unlock pyramid access. The torch mechanic, charged with batteries, handles the day-night cycle in a way that at least adds a resource-management decision. Once inside the pyramid, the game pivots hard into trap-avoidance dungeon running, with Egyptian gods Anubis and Horus serving as adversarial forces trying to cut off your escape. On paper, that layered structure has genuine appeal for players who like their survival loops gated behind puzzle gates rather than pure resource grind. The problem is execution and project health. Steam reviews sit at a mixed rating across roughly fifteen votes, which is a small sample but not an encouraging one. The game entered Early Access in August 2017 with a stated full-release window that came and went, and the last recorded patch landed in early 2018. The developer's planned content list, including three fully trapped pyramid dungeons and a hand-drawn black-and-white comic narrative, appears to remain incomplete years later. Community forum posts flagged survival mechanics that did not behave consistently, including a water-collection system that confused early players. For a game built around resource scarcity, unreliable survival systems are a structural problem, not a surface bug. The aesthetic direction is one of the few areas worth a genuine nod. The hand-drawn comic-style storytelling, rendered in black and white, is an unusual choice for the genre and gives the project a distinct visual personality that a bigger-budget Egyptian title would never attempt. First-person and third-person camera toggle is also present and functional. But personality alone does not carry a game that stalled in pre-alpha, and with no evidence of ongoing development since 2018, buyers today are purchasing a time capsule of an abandoned Early Access build, not a living product. If you are the type who digs through dormant Early Access libraries for rough-but-real solo-developer projects with an interesting structural idea, AEGYPTUS will give you something to poke at for an afternoon. Everyone else, and especially anyone expecting a polished Egyptian puzzle-survival experience, should look elsewhere. The bones of an interesting three-act survival loop are here. The house was never finished. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:sub-5Abandoned Early AccessEgyptian MythologyDehydration MechanicTrap AvoidanceHand-drawn NarrativeMode-Switching GameplaySolo Developer

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7/8/10 64bit
Memory
4096 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
4257 MB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 650 (1024 MB), Radeon HD 7770 (1024 MB)
Processor
Intel Core i3-530, AMD Athlon II X2 270
Sound Card
DirectX®-compatible
Additional Notes
Game not tested on notebook chipsets

Recommended

OS
Windows 7/8/10 64bit
Memory
6144 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
4257 MB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 750 (2048 MB), Radeon R9 270X (2048 MB)
Processor
Intel Core i3-3240, AMD Athlon X4 860K
Sound Card
DirectX®-compatible
Additional Notes
Game not tested on notebook chipsets

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
L.C.
Publisher
JustPlayNow
Release Date
Aug 15, 2017

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Price History

2026-06-100.39(lowest)

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What platforms is AEGYPTUS available on?

AEGYPTUS is available on PC.

When was AEGYPTUS released?

AEGYPTUS was released on 15 August 2017.

Who developed AEGYPTUS?

AEGYPTUS was developed by L.C. and published by JustPlayNow.