Compare Drill Deal – Oil Tycoon prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Published by Manager Games S.A.. Released on 3/9/2022. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Casual, Indie, Simulation, Strategy.

More layers than its voxel art style suggests: worker morale, oil refining chains, pirate raids, and platform layout puzzles all compete for your attention at once.

My instinct with a budget sim tagged 'Casual' is to expect shallow clicking with a tycoon coat of paint. Drill Deal - Oil Tycoon is not that, and the gap between its low-key presentation and actual mechanical density is wider than you'd expect. The core loop is a production-chain management game set on an offshore drilling platform. You drill crude, refine it into fuel, then process fuel further into higher-margin products like lubricant or asphalt. Each step needs staffed buildings, and those buildings need physical space on a platform you have to physically expand by buying and shipping in construction blocks first. That supply-chain dependency on materials arriving before you can build anything is an early chokepoint the tutorial handles unevenly. It explains the broad strokes but glosses over how critical your block delivery cadence really is, which means first-timers will hit a wall before the game clicks. Push through it. Once the flow state kicks in, the session-length creep is real. Worker management sits alongside the production side and adds genuine strategic texture. Employees carry individual skill ratings that affect output quality at each station, so you want your top-rated drilling expert on the drill, your best chef in the kitchen, and day-night shift allocations set up before your rig scales past a dozen workers. High-skill workers demand better food, better quarters, and entertainment facilities like a cinema or recreation room. Neglect that and they perform below standard, quit, or in edge cases die. Building placement matters too: staff welfare buildings cannot sit adjacent to noisy production machinery without tanking morale, so your spatial layout decisions have real downstream consequences. That is a more interesting constraint than most games at this price bracket bother to include. The campaign runs eight scenarios across distinct locations, from Arctic conditions with blizzards to pirate-heavy tropical waters. Each scenario resets from zero, which keeps early-game pacing familiar after the first few levels. The campaign's main criticism from players is accurate: platform expansion hits an artificial ceiling once primary objectives are cleared, which makes sandbox mode the real endgame. Sandbox removes those expansion caps and lets you build the bloated, multi-platform oil empire the campaign only teases. The worker cap of fifty and a relatively passive AI that often ignores broken machinery rather than fixing it are the two genuine rough edges. You compensate for the AI laziness by overhiring and accepting some redundancy in your workforce, which is a valid workaround but not an elegant design solution. For tycoon-genre veterans, Drill Deal - Oil Tycoon lands as a competent, occasionally surprising entry. The voxel art reads as mobile at a glance but runs without technical issues on PC, and the UI surfaces production data cleanly. It is not a deep simulation on the level of Factorio or Offworld Trading Company, but it targets a different audience: players who want a clear feedback loop, a visible progression of platform size, and enough crisis variety (storms, fires, pirate attacks, kraken encounters, yes really) to keep sessions from going stale. For a newcomer to the genre it is one of the friendlier onramps available, rough tutorial notwithstanding. Steam user reception sits in the low-to-mid positive band, and that feels accurate. Diego, Scout Team

Drill Deal – Oil Tycoon
CasualIndieSimulationStrategy

Drill Deal – Oil Tycoon

Mar 9, 2022UnknownManager Games S.A.
GamerScout Says

More layers than its voxel art style suggests: worker morale, oil refining chains, pirate raids, and platform layout puzzles all compete for your attention at once.

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About Drill Deal – Oil Tycoon

My instinct with a budget sim tagged 'Casual' is to expect shallow clicking with a tycoon coat of paint. Drill Deal - Oil Tycoon is not that, and the gap between its low-key presentation and actual mechanical density is wider than you'd expect. The core loop is a production-chain management game set on an offshore drilling platform. You drill crude, refine it into fuel, then process fuel further into higher-margin products like lubricant or asphalt. Each step needs staffed buildings, and those buildings need physical space on a platform you have to physically expand by buying and shipping in construction blocks first. That supply-chain dependency on materials arriving before you can build anything is an early chokepoint the tutorial handles unevenly. It explains the broad strokes but glosses over how critical your block delivery cadence really is, which means first-timers will hit a wall before the game clicks. Push through it. Once the flow state kicks in, the session-length creep is real. Worker management sits alongside the production side and adds genuine strategic texture. Employees carry individual skill ratings that affect output quality at each station, so you want your top-rated drilling expert on the drill, your best chef in the kitchen, and day-night shift allocations set up before your rig scales past a dozen workers. High-skill workers demand better food, better quarters, and entertainment facilities like a cinema or recreation room. Neglect that and they perform below standard, quit, or in edge cases die. Building placement matters too: staff welfare buildings cannot sit adjacent to noisy production machinery without tanking morale, so your spatial layout decisions have real downstream consequences. That is a more interesting constraint than most games at this price bracket bother to include. The campaign runs eight scenarios across distinct locations, from Arctic conditions with blizzards to pirate-heavy tropical waters. Each scenario resets from zero, which keeps early-game pacing familiar after the first few levels. The campaign's main criticism from players is accurate: platform expansion hits an artificial ceiling once primary objectives are cleared, which makes sandbox mode the real endgame. Sandbox removes those expansion caps and lets you build the bloated, multi-platform oil empire the campaign only teases. The worker cap of fifty and a relatively passive AI that often ignores broken machinery rather than fixing it are the two genuine rough edges. You compensate for the AI laziness by overhiring and accepting some redundancy in your workforce, which is a valid workaround but not an elegant design solution. For tycoon-genre veterans, Drill Deal - Oil Tycoon lands as a competent, occasionally surprising entry. The voxel art reads as mobile at a glance but runs without technical issues on PC, and the UI surfaces production data cleanly. It is not a deep simulation on the level of Factorio or Offworld Trading Company, but it targets a different audience: players who want a clear feedback loop, a visible progression of platform size, and enough crisis variety (storms, fires, pirate attacks, kraken encounters, yes really) to keep sessions from going stale. For a newcomer to the genre it is one of the friendlier onramps available, rough tutorial notwithstanding. Steam user reception sits in the low-to-mid positive band, and that feels accurate. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:indieProduction ChainWorker MoraleBase ExpansionVoxel ArtCrisis EventsSandbox ModeOffshore SettingResource Refining

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Playable

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7+
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce 9600 GT/ AMD Radeon HD 6450
Processor
Intel i5

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia Geforce GT520 / AMD Radeon HD 6670 or higher
Processor
Intel i5+

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Game Info

Developer
Unknown
Publisher
Manager Games S.A.
Release Date
Mar 9, 2022

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What platforms is Drill Deal – Oil Tycoon available on?

Drill Deal – Oil Tycoon is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Drill Deal – Oil Tycoon released?

Drill Deal – Oil Tycoon was released on 9 March 2022.