Compare Charterstone: Digital Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Acram Digital. Published by Acram Digital. Released on 3/26/2020. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Casual, Indie, Simulation, Strategy.

A worker-placement legacy campaign that starts suspiciously simple and earns its complexity over twelve interconnected games - rewarding patient strategists, frustrating anyone who skips the rulebook.

I've tracked a lot of digital board game ports through Acram Digital's catalog, and Charterstone sits in an interesting spot: the underlying design is genuinely clever, but the digital wrapper has a reputation for making newcomers work harder than they should. The core loop has you picking one of six characters, planting your starting charter on the board with a resource-producing building - pumpkin, wood, brick, coal, iron, or grain, each shaping your early economy differently - then placing workers to collect resources, construct more buildings, and crack open crates that gradually expand the ruleset. That last part is the hook. Every crate you unlock can introduce new buildings, additional workers, fresh scoring mechanisms, and bonus objectives that carry forward into the next session. After twelve games, no two campaigns look the same, and the map you end up with is entirely your own. The legacy structure is worth understanding before you spend a minute on it. Game one genuinely feels thin - almost too thin. The ruleset is deliberately stripped back, the board is sparse, and veteran strategy players may wonder what all the fuss is about. Stick with it. By games four or five, the influence track is dictating who makes map-wide decisions that can change how final scores are tallied, and you start realizing that the resource engine you built in game two is either compounding nicely or quietly strangling you. The between-game decisions about Glory rewards and advancement mat choices are where real strategic identity forms. It is not the most branching legacy experience in the genre - the narrative beats are lighter than, say, a Pandemic Legacy campaign - but the steady mechanical accumulation is satisfying in its own right. For solo or AI play on PC, keyboard-and-mouse is genuinely the correct input method here. The UI, while occasionally cramped - key information like the Progress track and Market board lives behind clickable menus rather than sitting visible on-screen - is manageable once you learn where things hide. AI opponents come in Easy, Medium, and Hard, and while they are serviceable enough to push you through a solo campaign, the community consensus is clear: this game is built for human competition. Running an asynchronous online campaign with up to six players, mixing in AI to fill empty charters, is where the diverging build strategies between players produce genuinely interesting tension. Watching opponents develop their charters in different directions across twelve sessions, then converging on final scoring, is the experience Charterstone was designed around. The technical track record is the honest caveat here. At launch the digital version shipped with meaningful bugs - campaign-breaking glory glitches, multiplayer lobby instability, and an onboarding experience that essentially assumed you already owned the physical game. Patches have addressed much of this over time, but isolated reports of online session instability have persisted across platforms. On PC via Steam, mouse-driven play sidesteps the controller-input frustrations that plagued console versions. If you are coming in completely cold with no familiarity with worker placement mechanics or legacy games, budget time to read the in-game rulebook before your first session - the tutorial does not hold your hand through the system in any meaningful way, and the first game will feel opaque without that groundwork. With that prep done, the learning curve flattens quickly because the game itself adds complexity incrementally. Diego, Scout Team

Charterstone: Digital Edition
CasualIndieSimulationStrategy

Charterstone: Digital Edition

Mar 26, 2020Acram Digital
GamerScout Says

A worker-placement legacy campaign that starts suspiciously simple and earns its complexity over twelve interconnected games - rewarding patient strategists, frustrating anyone who skips the rulebook.

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About Charterstone: Digital Edition

I've tracked a lot of digital board game ports through Acram Digital's catalog, and Charterstone sits in an interesting spot: the underlying design is genuinely clever, but the digital wrapper has a reputation for making newcomers work harder than they should. The core loop has you picking one of six characters, planting your starting charter on the board with a resource-producing building - pumpkin, wood, brick, coal, iron, or grain, each shaping your early economy differently - then placing workers to collect resources, construct more buildings, and crack open crates that gradually expand the ruleset. That last part is the hook. Every crate you unlock can introduce new buildings, additional workers, fresh scoring mechanisms, and bonus objectives that carry forward into the next session. After twelve games, no two campaigns look the same, and the map you end up with is entirely your own. The legacy structure is worth understanding before you spend a minute on it. Game one genuinely feels thin - almost too thin. The ruleset is deliberately stripped back, the board is sparse, and veteran strategy players may wonder what all the fuss is about. Stick with it. By games four or five, the influence track is dictating who makes map-wide decisions that can change how final scores are tallied, and you start realizing that the resource engine you built in game two is either compounding nicely or quietly strangling you. The between-game decisions about Glory rewards and advancement mat choices are where real strategic identity forms. It is not the most branching legacy experience in the genre - the narrative beats are lighter than, say, a Pandemic Legacy campaign - but the steady mechanical accumulation is satisfying in its own right. For solo or AI play on PC, keyboard-and-mouse is genuinely the correct input method here. The UI, while occasionally cramped - key information like the Progress track and Market board lives behind clickable menus rather than sitting visible on-screen - is manageable once you learn where things hide. AI opponents come in Easy, Medium, and Hard, and while they are serviceable enough to push you through a solo campaign, the community consensus is clear: this game is built for human competition. Running an asynchronous online campaign with up to six players, mixing in AI to fill empty charters, is where the diverging build strategies between players produce genuinely interesting tension. Watching opponents develop their charters in different directions across twelve sessions, then converging on final scoring, is the experience Charterstone was designed around. The technical track record is the honest caveat here. At launch the digital version shipped with meaningful bugs - campaign-breaking glory glitches, multiplayer lobby instability, and an onboarding experience that essentially assumed you already owned the physical game. Patches have addressed much of this over time, but isolated reports of online session instability have persisted across platforms. On PC via Steam, mouse-driven play sidesteps the controller-input frustrations that plagued console versions. If you are coming in completely cold with no familiarity with worker placement mechanics or legacy games, budget time to read the in-game rulebook before your first session - the tutorial does not hold your hand through the system in any meaningful way, and the first game will feel opaque without that groundwork. With that prep done, the learning curve flattens quickly because the game itself adds complexity incrementally. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvplocal-multiplayerlocal-coopcross-platformtrading-cardstier:indieLegacy CampaignWorker PlacementAsynchronous MultiplayerResource ManagementIncremental RulesetBoard Game PortCrate Unlock System6-Player SupportCozy Strategy

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Playable

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 64 bit
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
650 MB available space
Graphics
DX9 (shader model 3.0) or DX11 with feature level 9.3 capabilities
Processor
Dual Core 1.6 GHz or better

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Game Info

Developer
Acram Digital
Publisher
Acram Digital
Release Date
Mar 26, 2020

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Price History

2026-06-1010.29(lowest)

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What platforms is Charterstone: Digital Edition available on?

Charterstone: Digital Edition is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was Charterstone: Digital Edition released?

Charterstone: Digital Edition was released on 26 March 2020.

Who developed Charterstone: Digital Edition?

Charterstone: Digital Edition was developed by Acram Digital.