Compare Decision Legacy Collection prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by FlyAnvil. Published by Armor Games Studios. Released on 1/30/2025. Available on PC, Mac. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie, RPG, Strategy.

Four Flash-era action-strategy games preserved in one bundle, and the core loop of reclaiming territory one district at a time still holds up better than it has any right to.

I came into this collection expecting a nostalgia hit with a short shelf life. What I found instead was a surprisingly coherent progression of design ideas across four games that each push the zone-control formula a little further than the last. The core is simple and readable: every map is divided into districts, each district has a threat level tied to enemy density, and your job is to grind that threat to zero by building level-3 defense towers, upgrading factories to generate daily income, and clearing the streets yourself in real-time top-down combat. The hearing mechanic in Decision 1 is a good example of how much thought went into even the earliest entry - zombies are drawn to gunfire, so trigger discipline is an actual tactical consideration, not just flavor. Decision 2: New City expands the map and introduces a wider weapons roster, moving from the original's pistol-and-shotgun setup toward RPGs and explosives. Decision 3 is where the resource management genuinely clicks into something strategy players will recognize. You are now managing soldier classes - engineers for factory income, builders for materials, rangers, captains, and a commander skill that lets you field up to six combat companions at once. The game adds a diplomacy layer with human factions and a dual-threat map split between zombie hordes in one sector and mutant factions in another. The skill tree includes active abilities like Rage Injection, which turns an infected enemy on its own allies, and Quake Leap for gap-closing melee burst. For a Flash-era game, that is a respectable number of levers. Decision Medieval then breaks the template entirely, swapping firearms for broadswords and crossbows, dropping you into a kingdom besieged by orcs and mythical monsters, and adding siege weapons like ballistae and catapults to the tower-defense side. The tonal whiplash from post-apocalyptic city streets to dark-fantasy castle defense is jarring in the best way. For newcomers wondering whether the Flash origins are a liability: they are not a complete dealbreaker, but you need to set expectations correctly. The UI is minimal, tutorials are thin, and Decision 1 in particular shows its age in the writing and mechanical roughness. Decision 2 is a meaningful step up in polish, and by Decision 3 the systems have enough depth to warrant the kind of build-order thinking I normally reserve for proper grand-strategy titles. The collection sits at a Very Positive rating on Steam with around 83% approval, which tracks with what I experienced - the later entries carry the bundle, while the first game is mostly there for completeness. The honest caveat is that these games are preserved in their original form, which means no mod support, no difficulty sliders, and no quality-of-life additions you might expect from a modern remaster. If you go in expecting a ground-up rebuild, you will be disappointed. If you go in understanding this is four cult Flash games now running natively on PC and Mac without needing an emulator, and that the strategic depth compounds meaningfully across each entry, you will get fair value for your time. GG.deals estimates roughly 28 hours to beat all four main stories, which is a respectable runtime for the asking price. Diego, Scout Team

Decision Legacy Collection
ActionAdventureIndieRPGStrategy

Decision Legacy Collection

Jan 30, 2025FlyAnvilArmor Games Studios
GamerScout Says

Four Flash-era action-strategy games preserved in one bundle, and the core loop of reclaiming territory one district at a time still holds up better than it has any right to.

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About Decision Legacy Collection

I came into this collection expecting a nostalgia hit with a short shelf life. What I found instead was a surprisingly coherent progression of design ideas across four games that each push the zone-control formula a little further than the last. The core is simple and readable: every map is divided into districts, each district has a threat level tied to enemy density, and your job is to grind that threat to zero by building level-3 defense towers, upgrading factories to generate daily income, and clearing the streets yourself in real-time top-down combat. The hearing mechanic in Decision 1 is a good example of how much thought went into even the earliest entry - zombies are drawn to gunfire, so trigger discipline is an actual tactical consideration, not just flavor. Decision 2: New City expands the map and introduces a wider weapons roster, moving from the original's pistol-and-shotgun setup toward RPGs and explosives. Decision 3 is where the resource management genuinely clicks into something strategy players will recognize. You are now managing soldier classes - engineers for factory income, builders for materials, rangers, captains, and a commander skill that lets you field up to six combat companions at once. The game adds a diplomacy layer with human factions and a dual-threat map split between zombie hordes in one sector and mutant factions in another. The skill tree includes active abilities like Rage Injection, which turns an infected enemy on its own allies, and Quake Leap for gap-closing melee burst. For a Flash-era game, that is a respectable number of levers. Decision Medieval then breaks the template entirely, swapping firearms for broadswords and crossbows, dropping you into a kingdom besieged by orcs and mythical monsters, and adding siege weapons like ballistae and catapults to the tower-defense side. The tonal whiplash from post-apocalyptic city streets to dark-fantasy castle defense is jarring in the best way. For newcomers wondering whether the Flash origins are a liability: they are not a complete dealbreaker, but you need to set expectations correctly. The UI is minimal, tutorials are thin, and Decision 1 in particular shows its age in the writing and mechanical roughness. Decision 2 is a meaningful step up in polish, and by Decision 3 the systems have enough depth to warrant the kind of build-order thinking I normally reserve for proper grand-strategy titles. The collection sits at a Very Positive rating on Steam with around 83% approval, which tracks with what I experienced - the later entries carry the bundle, while the first game is mostly there for completeness. The honest caveat is that these games are preserved in their original form, which means no mod support, no difficulty sliders, and no quality-of-life additions you might expect from a modern remaster. If you go in expecting a ground-up rebuild, you will be disappointed. If you go in understanding this is four cult Flash games now running natively on PC and Mac without needing an emulator, and that the strategic depth compounds meaningfully across each entry, you will get fair value for your time. GG.deals estimates roughly 28 hours to beat all four main stories, which is a respectable runtime for the asking price. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:sub-5Zone ControlThreat-Level SystemWeapon Upgrade TreeCompanion ManagementFlash-Era ClassicResource TickingDual-Threat MapMedieval SpinoffDistrict Liberation

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Playable

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 or newer
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 750 Ti or AMD Radeon HD 7850 (1GB VRAM)
Processor
2.0 GHz Dual Core

Recommended

OS
Windows 7 or newer
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 750 Ti or AMD Radeon HD 7850 (1GB VRAM)
Processor
2.0 GHz Dual Core

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Game Info

Developer
FlyAnvil
Publisher
Armor Games Studios
Release Date
Jan 30, 2025

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How much does Decision Legacy Collection cost?

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What platforms is Decision Legacy Collection available on?

Decision Legacy Collection is available on PC, Mac.

When was Decision Legacy Collection released?

Decision Legacy Collection was released on 30 January 2025.

Who developed Decision Legacy Collection?

Decision Legacy Collection was developed by FlyAnvil and published by Armor Games Studios.