
DarkSwitch
Building upward instead of outward sounds like a gimmick until the fog starts climbing your roots and you realize you've placed your granary three layers too low. Inspired stuff, rough edges and all.
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About DarkSwitch
My spreadsheet instincts told me to treat DarkSwitch as a Frostpunk variant with a coat of bark, and I was wrong within the first hour. The axis shift from horizontal expansion to vertical stacking around a 200-metre Ardentis Tree changes the calculus of city planning at a fundamental level, not a cosmetic one. Logistics that you barely think about in a flat builder suddenly become your primary puzzle: resource chains slow down as they climb, critical facilities need to sit high enough that fog surges cannot reach them, and the lower districts you settled early become a liability you must either sacrifice or frantically reinforce. The systems that surround that core idea are dense and genuinely interlocked. You are managing 11 resource types, balancing raw material extraction against processed-goods production, all while rationing worker assignments across a city that is physically difficult to traverse. Connecting tiers with ziplines, stairways, elevators, and platforms is not optional cosmetic infrastructure - it is your logistical backbone, and a badly planned connection point can bottleneck an entire layer of your settlement. The fog itself, rendered through a custom voxel simulation, behaves dynamically rather than scripted, so surge pressure shifts in ways that make complacency expensive. On top of that sits a campaign running 20-plus hours, with four named protagonists, branching narrative threads, and moral choices that are rarely clean - some decisions ask you to abandon lower districts to preserve essential infrastructure above, and the game does not let you forget the human cost. The Akira Yamaoka soundtrack (yes, the Silent Hill composer) does a lot of atmospheric heavy lifting throughout. Where DarkSwitch genuinely struggles is in presenting all of this to the player cleanly. The tutorial relies heavily on stopping the action to push walls of text at you rather than guiding you through highlighted UI elements, which is a frustrating way to introduce systems this layered. Camera controls improve once you calibrate to them, but early sessions involve a fair amount of fighting the view. Player reports also flag pathfinding quirks for citizens, occasional performance hitches, and building-placement friction that should be smoother by now. The developers are patching actively - quality-of-life updates have already landed - and the Steam trajectory tells the real story: all-time reviews sit at Mostly Positive while the most recent 30-day window has climbed to Very Positive, which usually means a studio responding to feedback at meaningful speed. For strategy players with patience for rough launch windows, DarkSwitch is the kind of game worth getting into now rather than later. The free-play mode lets you strip out the campaign pressure and just study the systems, which I would genuinely recommend as an on-ramp before committing to the main story. Think of it as homework that is actually enjoyable. The conceptual ambition here is real, the interlocking pressure systems create the kind of cascading-crisis moments that define memorable strategy sessions, and the vertical constraint means you cannot brute-force your way out of bad decisions the way a flat builder often allows. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
Steam Deck & Linux
Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported. Runs on Linux but with crashes or issues. Based on 7 ProtonDB community reports.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 10/11 (64-bit)
- Memory
- 16 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 12
- Storage
- 30 GB available space
- Graphics
- NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 / AMD Radeon RX 6600 (6+ ГБ VRAM)
- Processor
- Intel Core i5-11400 / AMD Ryzen 5 5600X
- Additional Notes
- SSD Required
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 10/11 (64-bit)
- Memory
- 16 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 12
- Storage
- 30 GB available space
- Graphics
- NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 / AMD Radeon RX 7900 XT
- Processor
- Intel Core Ultra 7 265K / AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D
- Additional Notes
- SSD Required
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Reviews & Ratings
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Game Info
- Developer
- Cyber Temple
- Publisher
- Cyber Temple Games LLC
- Release Date
- Apr 9, 2026