Compare Frostpunk and The Rifts DLC prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by 11 bit studios. Available on PC.

Frostpunk and The Rifts DLC

Frostpunk and The Rifts DLC

Add-on / DLC for Frostpunk — view full game
TBA11 bit studiosUnknown
PC
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Historical low: €3.68

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Price History

Historical low
€3.686 Jun 2026
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€3.39€3.58€3.78€3.976 Jun12 Jun17 Jun23 Jun28 Jun
Tracking prices since 6 Jun 2026
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About Frostpunk and The Rifts DLC

I have a folder of failed Frostpunk runs labeled by cause of death: 'coal miscalculation,' 'generator overload,' 'hope collapse day 18.' That folder is the best endorsement I can give this game. From the moment you inherit a few hundred freezing survivors huddled around a coal-burning generator in an alternate-history 1886 ice age, every decision compounds. You are not building a city for fun. You are managing a slow-motion catastrophe, and the game never lets you forget it. The core loop is tighter than most city builders. Resources, coal especially, feed the central generator that keeps your circular settlement from becoming a mass grave. Wood, steel, and food create constant trade-off pressure: build a pub to lift morale, or spend that wood on a medical post? Assign workers to hunt for food or pull them into the coal mines? The technology tree unlocks steam-powered infrastructure, automatons, and heating upgrades, but the pacing is fixed-scenario rather than sandbox, which means the pressure never relents in the way a Tropico or Cities Skylines lets it. Scout teams dispatched to the frozen wastes bring back survivors, resources, and narrative beats that flesh out the world beyond your generator's heat radius. The Book of Laws is where the moral machinery really engages: do you mandate child labor to survive a killing frost, then sign propaganda edicts to keep your people from revolting? The game tracks Hope and Discontent as parallel meters that can end your run faster than any blizzard. For strategy players, the depth of decision-making here is genuine. It sits closer to a narrative grand strategy than a casual city builder. Each of the scenarios, including the DLC content that ships with this version, forces a different opening priority. The Arks scenario, for instance, reframes the resource equation entirely, while The Last Autumn functions almost as a prequel that demands a different build philosophy from the first hour. Replayability comes from optimizing your build order, not from emergent sandbox creativity, so if you want a living city that grows on its own terms, look elsewhere. The scripted event structure is clever the first time through and starts to show its seams on a third playthrough. The tutorial is functional without being generous. Newcomers to the genre will hit a wall in the first scenario and should not be embarrassed to drop the difficulty or consult a build guide before their second attempt. The game does not explain its Hope/Discontent thresholds in enough detail for a first-timer to internalize them before it is already too late. That said, the multiple difficulty settings genuinely change the experience, and the lower settings are not a sign of defeat. They are a legitimate first-time path to understanding the systems before attempting the brutal default mode. The interface can be unintuitive, particularly when cross-referencing heat range overlays with building placement, but it becomes second nature after two or three sessions. At an 84 on Metacritic and ranked near the top percentile on OpenCritic, Frostpunk has the critical consensus to back up its reputation. What reviewers consistently flag as its strongest quality is emotional investment: the decisions here carry actual weight because 11 bit studios built a world where losing feels meaningful rather than arbitrary. Its weakest point, a valid one, is that the scripted scenario structure limits long-term variety compared to open-ended city builders. If you can accept that Frostpunk is closer to a tense campaign experience than an endless sandbox, the fifteen to twenty hours per scenario feel completely justified.

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Game Info

Developer
11 bit studios
Publisher
Unknown
Release Date
TBA

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How much does Frostpunk and The Rifts DLC cost?

Frostpunk and The Rifts DLC pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

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What platforms is Frostpunk and The Rifts DLC available on?

Frostpunk and The Rifts DLC is available on PC.

Who developed Frostpunk and The Rifts DLC?

Frostpunk and The Rifts DLC was developed by 11 bit studios.