
Buggos 2
A low-micro swarm RTS with a genuinely clever evolution tree that rewards build experimentation across 45 missions. Deeper than it looks, friendlier to newcomers than it has any right to be.
Compare Prices(0 stores)
Loading prices...
We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.
Screenshots & Media

About Buggos 2
My instinct with any self-described 'low-micro RTS' is to brace for a thin experience wrapped in accessibility excuses. Buggos 2 defied that instinct faster than I expected. The Attack Pin system, where you point your spawners at a target and let up to 5,000 bugs sort out the rest, sounds like a removal of strategy. It is actually a reassignment of it. Because your hands are free from unit babysitting, you spend your time on the decisions that actually matter: which evolutions to unlock after each battle, which terrain routes to exploit, and when to wipe your tree and rebuild from scratch for a trickier map. The evolution and mutation systems are where the real strategy lives, and they hold up to scrutiny. Over 150 evolutions let you push individual Buggo types in very different directions, and the nearly 25 planetary-conquest mutations can genuinely redefine how a unit class functions mid-campaign. The free reset mechanic is crucial here and the developers got it right. You are never punished for experimenting, which means the 45-mission campaign across 9 planets functions more like a long series of build puzzles than a march of samey skirmishes. New unit types like the Defender add tactical wrinkles the original lacked, and players who came in with strategies from the first game will find those habits carry over but get tested by the expanded roster. For newcomers worried about the RTS label, this is genuinely one of the friendlier entry points in the genre. The macro decisions are interesting, the micro demands are minimal, and the tutorial-adjacent difficulty curve does not condescend. Veterans who want more friction can scale difficulty up, and on higher settings the human adaptation system earns its keep: each planet you conquer makes human defenses meaningfully harder, and you choose how they punish your aggression. That asymmetric escalation keeps late-game planning relevant in a way that a simple stat-scaling difficulty slider never does. The criticisms worth flagging are real but manageable. Some players find the evolution point budget tight, feeling pushed toward a narrow set of upgrades rather than genuine build variety, especially early when the tree is sparse. A handful of maps have a difficulty spike that feels less like a design test and more like an accident, with some community members flagging specific missions as outliers. The Steam Workshop is active and a full level editor ships with the game, so the content ceiling extends well past the base campaign. Post-launch patches have been steady, addressing balance on units like the Boom Slug and fixing performance issues, which signals a developer still paying attention. If you bounced off traditional RTS games because the thought of managing thirty unit types in real time put you off, Buggos 2 is the genre at its most honest about what actually creates interesting decisions. The depth is in the build, not the clicks. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
Steam Deck & Linux
Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 3 ProtonDB community reports.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 10, Windows 11
- Graphics
- NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060
- Processor
- AMD Ryzen 7 5800H
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 10, Windows 11
- Graphics
- NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060
- Processor
- AMD Ryzen 7 5800H (the game is CPU hungry - more is better)
Community Discussion
Be the first to comment on Buggos 2.
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- Intrepid Marmot
- Publisher
- Intrepid Marmot
- Release Date
- Sep 25, 2025