Compare Battle for Sea 3D prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Hede. Published by Hede. Released on 4/8/2021. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Action, Adventure, Casual, Indie, RPG, Simulation, Sports, Strategy.

Battleship on PC, stripped to the bones - if a two-player grid-and-guess loop with zero AI ambition sounds like your afternoon, go in with eyes open.

I sat down with Battle for Sea 3D expecting at least some mechanical wrinkle on the classic Battleship formula, and within five minutes the honest truth was on the table: this is a near-literal digital port of the pen-and-paper guessing game, wrapped in a 3D shell thin enough to see through. That is not automatically a disqualifier, but it does set a hard ceiling on what you should expect when you load it up. The loop works exactly as the board game always did. Each player places their ships on a grid by clicking cells and rotating pieces across four cardinal directions. Then turns alternate: pick a square on the enemy grid, hit the shooting button, and watch for a blue splash (miss) or a red marker (hit). There are no weapon types, no special abilities, no grid-size options visible from the outside, no fog-of-war variation. One shot per turn, every turn, until one fleet sinks. From a decision-making standpoint, the strategy ceiling is the same probabilistic deduction you learned as a kid - hunt the edges, then sweep the interior, follow up on hits. Anyone hoping for a layered turn-based system with flanking, initiative, or resource management will leave immediately. The AI is the biggest practical problem. Community feedback from the handful of players who have reported on it describes the opponent as unambitious at best - firing seemingly at random rather than following up on confirmed hits. For a genre where the computer's targeting logic is the only source of meaningful resistance in singleplayer, a passive AI collapses the experience to a one-sided guessing exercise. There is no difficulty selector documented anywhere in the publicly available information, which makes replay value difficult to imagine beyond a handful of sessions. The game does carry Steam Achievements and Leaderboards, so completionists farming a quick achievement list may find a narrow purpose here. Where does that leave the audience? Realistically, this lands for two very specific groups. First, younger or very casual players who have never had a digital Battleship experience and want the concept without spending time on a premium release. The placement phase - rotating boats in four directions across the grid - is intuitive enough that no tutorial is needed, which is a genuine accessibility point worth noting. Second, achievement hunters who treat low-barrier Steam libraries as a checklist. Everyone else, including strategy players who want their turn-based naval game to reward positioning skill or smart ship composition, will find the depth they are looking for in other titles. There is no modding ecosystem, no post-launch updates visible, and no multiplayer mode that works outside of local hot-seat play on a single machine. The genre label on the store page stretches across Action, RPG, Sports, and Simulation simultaneously, none of which describe what is actually here. Managing expectations is the entire job when approaching Battle for Sea 3D. It does one narrow thing - grid-based naval deduction - and it does that thing without additions, refinements, or mechanical ambition. If that premise is enough, the session length is short and the barrier to entry is zero. If you need the turn-based tag to carry genuine tactical weight, look elsewhere and do not look back. Diego, Scout Team

Battle for Sea 3D
ActionAdventureCasualIndieRPGSimulationSportsStrategy

Battle for Sea 3D

Apr 8, 2021Hede
GamerScout Says

Battleship on PC, stripped to the bones - if a two-player grid-and-guess loop with zero AI ambition sounds like your afternoon, go in with eyes open.

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About Battle for Sea 3D

I sat down with Battle for Sea 3D expecting at least some mechanical wrinkle on the classic Battleship formula, and within five minutes the honest truth was on the table: this is a near-literal digital port of the pen-and-paper guessing game, wrapped in a 3D shell thin enough to see through. That is not automatically a disqualifier, but it does set a hard ceiling on what you should expect when you load it up. The loop works exactly as the board game always did. Each player places their ships on a grid by clicking cells and rotating pieces across four cardinal directions. Then turns alternate: pick a square on the enemy grid, hit the shooting button, and watch for a blue splash (miss) or a red marker (hit). There are no weapon types, no special abilities, no grid-size options visible from the outside, no fog-of-war variation. One shot per turn, every turn, until one fleet sinks. From a decision-making standpoint, the strategy ceiling is the same probabilistic deduction you learned as a kid - hunt the edges, then sweep the interior, follow up on hits. Anyone hoping for a layered turn-based system with flanking, initiative, or resource management will leave immediately. The AI is the biggest practical problem. Community feedback from the handful of players who have reported on it describes the opponent as unambitious at best - firing seemingly at random rather than following up on confirmed hits. For a genre where the computer's targeting logic is the only source of meaningful resistance in singleplayer, a passive AI collapses the experience to a one-sided guessing exercise. There is no difficulty selector documented anywhere in the publicly available information, which makes replay value difficult to imagine beyond a handful of sessions. The game does carry Steam Achievements and Leaderboards, so completionists farming a quick achievement list may find a narrow purpose here. Where does that leave the audience? Realistically, this lands for two very specific groups. First, younger or very casual players who have never had a digital Battleship experience and want the concept without spending time on a premium release. The placement phase - rotating boats in four directions across the grid - is intuitive enough that no tutorial is needed, which is a genuine accessibility point worth noting. Second, achievement hunters who treat low-barrier Steam libraries as a checklist. Everyone else, including strategy players who want their turn-based naval game to reward positioning skill or smart ship composition, will find the depth they are looking for in other titles. There is no modding ecosystem, no post-launch updates visible, and no multiplayer mode that works outside of local hot-seat play on a single machine. The genre label on the store page stretches across Action, RPG, Sports, and Simulation simultaneously, none of which describe what is actually here. Managing expectations is the entire job when approaching Battle for Sea 3D. It does one narrow thing - grid-based naval deduction - and it does that thing without additions, refinements, or mechanical ambition. If that premise is enough, the session length is short and the barrier to entry is zero. If you need the turn-based tag to carry genuine tactical weight, look elsewhere and do not look back. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:aaaGrid-BasedTurn-Based DeductionHot-Seat MultiplayerAchievement HuntingCasual Board GameNo AI Difficulty OptionsLow Barrier to Entry

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7/8/10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
150 MB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce 450 or higher with 1GB Memory
Processor
3GHz Duo Core Processor

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Game Info

Developer
Hede
Publisher
Hede
Release Date
Apr 8, 2021

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Frequently asked questions about Battle for Sea 3D

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What platforms is Battle for Sea 3D available on?

Battle for Sea 3D is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was Battle for Sea 3D released?

Battle for Sea 3D was released on 8 April 2021.

Who developed Battle for Sea 3D?

Battle for Sea 3D was developed by Hede.