Compare Deep Despair prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by BekkerDev Studio. Published by BekkerDev Studio. Released on 2/17/2020. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie, RPG, Simulation.

A retro 2D survival sandbox that wears its Minecraft debt openly, but lands at a 'Mixed' rating on Steam for a reason. Worth knowing what you're getting before you click anything.

I've spent time with plenty of survival sandboxes in the sub-5 dollar tier, and the honest truth about Deep Despair is that it sits exactly at the midpoint of that market: not broken enough to refund, not deep enough to hold you past the first few hours. The game is a top-down, pixel-art survival crafting loop built by a solo hobbyist developer, and that context matters when you set your expectations. With around 235 Steam reviews landing at roughly 67 percent positive, the community reaction is split in a way that maps almost perfectly to one question: do you need mechanical novelty, or are you fine retracing familiar ground in a smaller package? The core loop follows a recognizable rhythm. You punch trees to get logs, split those logs on the ground with an axe to get usable wood, then craft a shelter before nightfall. Night matters here because underdeveloped characters get punished hard by dark-hour enemies, so the first couple of sessions are genuinely tense on that clock. The world is structured into four vertical tiers: the surface, standard caves, caves with rivers, and lava-level caves. Each descent unlocks more valuable resources, which creates a light progression incentive to push deeper even when the surface has everything you need to stay comfortable. Abandoned mines appear in the dungeons, adding a small discovery reward for explorers. Bonfire maintenance, an advanced hunger system, crop farming, and hunting round out the survival columns. Over 100 content items are claimed, which sounds generous but the density of meaningful crafting decisions is considerably thinner than that number implies. Where the game earns its positive reviews is in pure accessibility. The retro pixel aesthetic runs on very modest hardware, the session structure is low-commitment, and the absence of multiplayer pressure means you can farm crops and dig tunnels entirely at your own pace. The developer has stated openly that game development is a personal hobby, which explains both the game's charm and its rough patches. There is no tutorial that respects newcomers in any structured sense: you are dropped in and expected to figure out the wood-to-log workflow, bonfire fuel management, and shelter-build timing largely through trial and death. That is fine for genre veterans but a real friction point for anyone new to survival crafting. The structural problems are hard to ignore if you come from genre stalwarts. The AI quality is minimal, enemy behavior is basic, and there is no mod ecosystem to speak of. Decision depth at the late-game is thin: once you have shelter, food supply, and weapons sorted, the systems do not compound into interesting new choices the way they do in Terraria or even a game like Starbound. The hunger system, specifically, drew community complaints about micromanagement without enough payoff, with players asking whether it could be toggled. BekkerDev Studio has released sequels (Deep Despair 2 and 3, which expand into procedural generation, brewing, animal breeding, and electricity), which suggests the original entry is largely a foundation stone rather than a complete experience. If you are looking at this as a budget curiosity, an afternoon time-filler, or an entry point into the survival genre with very low stakes, it delivers on those narrow terms. If you want build variety, AI that reacts intelligently, or a crafting tree with late-game branching depth, this will feel thin inside two hours. The sequel lineup is worth a look if the first entry connects with you. Diego, Scout Team

Deep Despair
ActionAdventureIndieRPGSimulation

Deep Despair

Feb 17, 2020BekkerDev Studio
GamerScout Says

A retro 2D survival sandbox that wears its Minecraft debt openly, but lands at a 'Mixed' rating on Steam for a reason. Worth knowing what you're getting before you click anything.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

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About Deep Despair

I've spent time with plenty of survival sandboxes in the sub-5 dollar tier, and the honest truth about Deep Despair is that it sits exactly at the midpoint of that market: not broken enough to refund, not deep enough to hold you past the first few hours. The game is a top-down, pixel-art survival crafting loop built by a solo hobbyist developer, and that context matters when you set your expectations. With around 235 Steam reviews landing at roughly 67 percent positive, the community reaction is split in a way that maps almost perfectly to one question: do you need mechanical novelty, or are you fine retracing familiar ground in a smaller package? The core loop follows a recognizable rhythm. You punch trees to get logs, split those logs on the ground with an axe to get usable wood, then craft a shelter before nightfall. Night matters here because underdeveloped characters get punished hard by dark-hour enemies, so the first couple of sessions are genuinely tense on that clock. The world is structured into four vertical tiers: the surface, standard caves, caves with rivers, and lava-level caves. Each descent unlocks more valuable resources, which creates a light progression incentive to push deeper even when the surface has everything you need to stay comfortable. Abandoned mines appear in the dungeons, adding a small discovery reward for explorers. Bonfire maintenance, an advanced hunger system, crop farming, and hunting round out the survival columns. Over 100 content items are claimed, which sounds generous but the density of meaningful crafting decisions is considerably thinner than that number implies. Where the game earns its positive reviews is in pure accessibility. The retro pixel aesthetic runs on very modest hardware, the session structure is low-commitment, and the absence of multiplayer pressure means you can farm crops and dig tunnels entirely at your own pace. The developer has stated openly that game development is a personal hobby, which explains both the game's charm and its rough patches. There is no tutorial that respects newcomers in any structured sense: you are dropped in and expected to figure out the wood-to-log workflow, bonfire fuel management, and shelter-build timing largely through trial and death. That is fine for genre veterans but a real friction point for anyone new to survival crafting. The structural problems are hard to ignore if you come from genre stalwarts. The AI quality is minimal, enemy behavior is basic, and there is no mod ecosystem to speak of. Decision depth at the late-game is thin: once you have shelter, food supply, and weapons sorted, the systems do not compound into interesting new choices the way they do in Terraria or even a game like Starbound. The hunger system, specifically, drew community complaints about micromanagement without enough payoff, with players asking whether it could be toggled. BekkerDev Studio has released sequels (Deep Despair 2 and 3, which expand into procedural generation, brewing, animal breeding, and electricity), which suggests the original entry is largely a foundation stone rather than a complete experience. If you are looking at this as a budget curiosity, an afternoon time-filler, or an entry point into the survival genre with very low stakes, it delivers on those narrow terms. If you want build variety, AI that reacts intelligently, or a crafting tree with late-game branching depth, this will feel thin inside two hours. The sequel lineup is worth a look if the first entry connects with you. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertrading-cardstier:sub-5Top-Down Survival4-Tier WorldBonfire MechanicsHunger ManagementSolo DevBudget SandboxResource TieringPixel Survival

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Playable

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 10
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
400 MB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GT 710 / AMD Radeon R7 240
Processor
Quad Core Processor 2.6+ GHz

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Game Info

Developer
BekkerDev Studio
Publisher
BekkerDev Studio
Release Date
Feb 17, 2020

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2026-06-100.41(lowest)
2026-06-090.41(lowest)

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Deep Despair is available on PC.

When was Deep Despair released?

Deep Despair was released on 17 February 2020.

Who developed Deep Despair?

Deep Despair was developed by BekkerDev Studio.