Compare Occupy Mars: The Game prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by ▲ Pyramid Games. Published by ▲ Pyramid Games. Released on 1/30/2026. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Indie, Simulation, Free To Play.

Granular enough to reward min-maxers, rough enough around the edges to frustrate everyone else. Occupy Mars demands patience before it pays out.

I keep a mental checklist for survival sims: does the resource chain have enough knots to make decisions meaningful, does the early game teach without hand-holding, and does the mid-game open up instead of plateau. Occupy Mars hits two of those three, which puts it in interesting but imperfect territory. Released out of a three-year Early Access stint in January 2026, this open-world Mars colonization sandbox carries both the ambitions and the accumulated rough edges of that long development road. The loop is genuinely deep for an indie sim. You crash-land, bootstrap a solar panel and a water well to survive the first night, then spend dozens of hours building outward: greenhouses fed by tiered plant growth across multiple stages (seedling to full dome-grown fruiting plants), oxygen scrubbers that must be manually tuned, an electricity grid of solar arrays and batteries that can leave you freezing in the dark if you miscalculate your overnight draw. Repairing broken components is its own mini-game involving soldering, hot-air tools, and swapping SMD components on a workbench - closer to Rover Mechanic Simulator DNA than a typical survival crafting title. A tech tree gated by experience across specific disciplines (Botany XP from harvesting, Mechanics XP from the jackhammer) adds a build-order dimension that strategy fans will appreciate. Unlocking the Heavy Rover, with its robotic arm, trailer bed, and remote-control option, opens up proper mining operations and long-range exploration. Finding black data tablets in abandoned bases to decrypt tech tree gateway blueprints gives exploration a genuine incentive rather than cosmetic reward. The community consensus, sitting at a mixed 66 percent positive across over a thousand English-language Steam reviews at launch, tells you what I suspected after digging in: the foundation is solid, but the execution has persistent friction. Vehicle physics are a recurring complaint, with rovers reportedly launching skyward at low speeds and resetting to locations far from where you left them. Crafting recipes have been flagged for ingredient misfires, particularly in chemistry, where inputs do not always match what the recipe demands. The late-game rocket construction requires gathering roughly a thousand units of a key component, currently collectable only one item at a time with a multi-second animation each click. That is a grind problem, not a design problem - fixable in a patch, but present right now. The tutorial provides a decent foundation across campaign and free mode, but gaps remain, and the game does not always communicate mechanical logic clearly enough for newcomers to self-correct. Co-op is supported online and cross-platform, which is a meaningful plus for a game where the base management load can feel overwhelming solo. For sim fans who like company, the co-op mode distributes the cognitive overhead in ways that make the experience friendlier. Singleplayer campaign and free mode both exist at launch, so players can choose structured objectives or pure sandbox without committing to one style permanently. The honest read is this: if you compare Occupy Mars to Stationeers it is nowhere near as technically demanding (no gas pressure or mix management), and if you compare it to Satisfactory it demands more planning per decision. It sits in a productive middle tier - accessible enough for genre newcomers prepared to read tooltips and consult community guides, deep enough to hold the attention of veterans who want a Mars-specific flavor. The bugs and physics jank are real, they show up in recent reviews, and they matter. But the underlying system design - the interlocking water, power, oxygen, and crop chains, the skill-specific XP, the scavenging loop through abandoned bases - is the kind of thing that earns hours without asking permission. Approach it as a work in progress with strong bones rather than a polished release, and the calculus improves significantly. Diego, Scout Team

Occupy Mars: The Game
AdventureIndieSimulationFree To Play

Occupy Mars: The Game

Jan 30, 2026▲ Pyramid Games
GamerScout Says

Granular enough to reward min-maxers, rough enough around the edges to frustrate everyone else. Occupy Mars demands patience before it pays out.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

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About Occupy Mars: The Game

I keep a mental checklist for survival sims: does the resource chain have enough knots to make decisions meaningful, does the early game teach without hand-holding, and does the mid-game open up instead of plateau. Occupy Mars hits two of those three, which puts it in interesting but imperfect territory. Released out of a three-year Early Access stint in January 2026, this open-world Mars colonization sandbox carries both the ambitions and the accumulated rough edges of that long development road. The loop is genuinely deep for an indie sim. You crash-land, bootstrap a solar panel and a water well to survive the first night, then spend dozens of hours building outward: greenhouses fed by tiered plant growth across multiple stages (seedling to full dome-grown fruiting plants), oxygen scrubbers that must be manually tuned, an electricity grid of solar arrays and batteries that can leave you freezing in the dark if you miscalculate your overnight draw. Repairing broken components is its own mini-game involving soldering, hot-air tools, and swapping SMD components on a workbench - closer to Rover Mechanic Simulator DNA than a typical survival crafting title. A tech tree gated by experience across specific disciplines (Botany XP from harvesting, Mechanics XP from the jackhammer) adds a build-order dimension that strategy fans will appreciate. Unlocking the Heavy Rover, with its robotic arm, trailer bed, and remote-control option, opens up proper mining operations and long-range exploration. Finding black data tablets in abandoned bases to decrypt tech tree gateway blueprints gives exploration a genuine incentive rather than cosmetic reward. The community consensus, sitting at a mixed 66 percent positive across over a thousand English-language Steam reviews at launch, tells you what I suspected after digging in: the foundation is solid, but the execution has persistent friction. Vehicle physics are a recurring complaint, with rovers reportedly launching skyward at low speeds and resetting to locations far from where you left them. Crafting recipes have been flagged for ingredient misfires, particularly in chemistry, where inputs do not always match what the recipe demands. The late-game rocket construction requires gathering roughly a thousand units of a key component, currently collectable only one item at a time with a multi-second animation each click. That is a grind problem, not a design problem - fixable in a patch, but present right now. The tutorial provides a decent foundation across campaign and free mode, but gaps remain, and the game does not always communicate mechanical logic clearly enough for newcomers to self-correct. Co-op is supported online and cross-platform, which is a meaningful plus for a game where the base management load can feel overwhelming solo. For sim fans who like company, the co-op mode distributes the cognitive overhead in ways that make the experience friendlier. Singleplayer campaign and free mode both exist at launch, so players can choose structured objectives or pure sandbox without committing to one style permanently. The honest read is this: if you compare Occupy Mars to Stationeers it is nowhere near as technically demanding (no gas pressure or mix management), and if you compare it to Satisfactory it demands more planning per decision. It sits in a productive middle tier - accessible enough for genre newcomers prepared to read tooltips and consult community guides, deep enough to hold the attention of veterans who want a Mars-specific flavor. The bugs and physics jank are real, they show up in recent reviews, and they matter. But the underlying system design - the interlocking water, power, oxygen, and crop chains, the skill-specific XP, the scavenging loop through abandoned bases - is the kind of thing that earns hours without asking permission. Approach it as a work in progress with strong bones rather than a polished release, and the calculus improves significantly. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayercooponline-coopcross-platformachievementstrading-cardscloud-savestier:indieTech-Tree ProgressionCircuit Board RepairRover CustomizationDay-Night Survival PressureScavenging LoopSkill-Based XPCross-Platform Co-opColony Management

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck UnsupportedProtonDB Gold

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported. Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 18 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
15 GB available space
Graphics
RX 570 4GB VRAM / GeForce GTX 970 4GB VRAM
Processor
Intel Core i5-6400 / AMD Ryzen 5 1500X
Sound Card
DirectX compatible
Additional Notes
System requirements may change during the development of the game.

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Memory
16 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
20 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 1070 8GB VRAM or better
Processor
Intel Core i5-6600K / AMD Ryzen 5 2600X or better
Sound Card
DirectX compatible
Additional Notes
System requirements may change during the development of the game.

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
▲ Pyramid Games
Publisher
▲ Pyramid Games
Release Date
Jan 30, 2026

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What platforms is Occupy Mars: The Game available on?

Occupy Mars: The Game is available on PC.

When was Occupy Mars: The Game released?

Occupy Mars: The Game was released on 30 January 2026.

Who developed Occupy Mars: The Game?

Occupy Mars: The Game was developed by ▲ Pyramid Games.