Pacific Drive
Survival extraction meets paranormal road trip: if babying a rust-bucket station wagon through an anomaly-riddled exclusion zone sounds like your idea of a good time, Pacific Drive absolutely delivers.
GamerScout Verdict
Best for patient solo players who want a deeply atmospheric survival loop and don't mind the wagon doing most of the emoting.
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About Pacific Drive
My first few hours with Pacific Drive felt like being handed a manual in a foreign language and told to drive. That initial friction is real and intentional, and it is the single biggest filter between the people who will end up obsessed with this game and the people who will bounce off it inside ninety minutes. Stick with it past that wall and Ironwood Studios' debut opens into one of the most singular survival experiences on PC right now. The core loop is a survival extraction rhythm: you plan a run from your garage, drive out into the Olympic Exclusion Zone, scavenge junk from abandoned structures and wrecked cars, collect energy anchors to power a gateway home, then race the destabilizing zone as it closes in around you. Each successful extraction lets you upgrade the wagon back at the shop, where over 100 blueprints cover everything from expanded trunk storage and extra fuel tanks to a resource radar that pings nearby materials. The car is functionally the game's main character. Individual parts wear down from combat with anomalies and rough terrain, and repairing them demands specific tools: Repair Putty for general bodywork, Sealing Kits for punctured tires, Electrician Kits for blown headlights. When a part is too far gone it gets replaced entirely, which means your wagon is in a constant state of managed decline and gradual improvement at the same time. It is strange, slightly stressful, and genuinely compelling. The Quirk system adds another layer: your car develops personality traits through use and damage, making it feel less like a vehicle and more like a temperamental co-pilot. Atmosphere is the game's loudest selling point and it earns every bit of praise. The Pacific Northwest exclusion zone feels like S.T.A.L.K.E.R. crossed with Firewatch, and the eerie electromagnetic storms, paranormal anomalies, and radio chatter from unseen NPCs build tension that most horror games spend entire budgets chasing. The alternative rock soundtrack playing through your in-car radio is a quietly brilliant touch. On the accessibility front, Pacific Drive is more generous than its reputation suggests: difficulty modifiers let you toggle off specific hazard types, improve pickup visibility, or even get a free repair and refuel after each successful run. That range means you can tune the experience from a nail-biting survival sim to something closer to a scenic anomaly tour. Here is where I have to be straight with you, though. Pacific Drive is not a racing game, and despite the genre tag it is arguably not primarily a driving game either. A significant portion of each run is spent on foot, looting buildings and hauling scrap back to the wagon. If you picked this up expecting long stretches behind the wheel, you may feel misled. The control scheme has also drawn consistent criticism for being awkward in the early game, and the UI can be genuinely obtuse: resources accidentally fed into the wrong garage machine are gone without any warning. The roguelite loop, while rewarding for patient players, does grow repetitive in the mid-game, and some players report the later story sections ease off the survival tension in ways that feel anticlimactic. Racing wheel support is absent, which is a notable gap for peripheral enthusiasts. This is firmly a solo experience with no multiplayer or co-op, so set expectations accordingly. For the right player, those rough edges fade into the background. If you have a taste for deliberate, atmospheric survival games, enjoy resource management that feels consequential, and can tolerate learning curve punishment in exchange for genuine depth and a story that drip-feeds sci-fi mystery in a satisfying way, Pacific Drive is an easy recommendation. The 83 percent Steam approval rating across a large review pool reflects a real consensus: this is a niche-but-strong game, not a universal one.

Sports & racing
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System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 10
- Processor
- Intel Core i5 8600
- Memory
- 16 GB RAM
- Graphics
- Nvidia GTX 1060 6GB
- DirectX
- Version 12
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 10
- Processor
- Intel Core i5-10600k
- Memory
- 16 GB RAM
- Graphics
- Nvidia RTX 2080/3070
- DirectX
- Version 12
- Storage
- 18 GB available space Add…
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Game Info
- Developer
- Ironwood Studios
- Publisher
- Kepler Interactive
- Release Date
- Feb 21, 2024


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