Compare Re-Legion prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Ice Code Games. Published by Fulqrum Publishing. Released on 1/31/2019. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Indie, RPG, Strategy. Metacritic score: 55/100.

A cyberpunk RTS with one genuinely clever idea - converting street civilians into cult soldiers - that a 55 Metacritic score and weak AI undercut before the campaign is half over.

My first honest reaction to Re-Legion was cautious optimism: a no-barracks RTS set in a neon-soaked technocracy where humans are the resource is the kind of mechanical twist that makes a strategy nerd sit up straight. The core loop has you guiding prophet Elion through an isometric cyberpunk city, preaching to grey-suited civilians and anointing them into unit roles - hackers stationed at crypto banks to pull in CryptoCredits, healers praying at temples to generate faith, Fanatics and Purifiers pushed toward the front line. Two parallel resource tracks, a population cap tied to how many districts you control, and a dogma tree that lets you lean into different creed styles: on paper, this is a lean, focused RTS premise worth taking seriously. The district-control structure works similarly to point-capture RTS design - you seize a building or statue and the surrounding district flips, expanding your follower cap and resource nodes. There is no base building whatsoever, which keeps the city feeling alive and removes the turtling habits that plague slower RTS players. The Holy Wars skirmish mode, added post-launch, lets you pick a creed and fight AI cults for city domination outside the campaign, which meaningfully extends the package beyond the nine story missions. Each creed carries its own dogma tree and skill set, so there is at least a structural argument for replaying with a different religious philosophy. The atmosphere genuinely delivers: the soundtrack is one of the most consistently praised elements across reviews, and the visual design - neon signage, temple statues, laser fire tearing through crowds - holds up as a coherent aesthetic. Here is where the spreadsheet gets ugly. The enemy AI follows repetitive patterns that experienced RTS players will read after one engagement, and a blob of ranged units defeats most threats without meaningful tactical adjustment. Pathfinding is a persistent problem: units clump at geometry, civilians pile up at metro entrances, and there is no order queuing with the Shift key - a control omission that punishes the micro-management the game constantly demands. The nine-mission campaign runs roughly seven hours at a median pace, and while creed choice introduces minor variation, the mission structure stays locked to the same wipe-or-capture formula throughout. No multiplayer exists. The writing around Elion is weak; he is positioned as a strategic genius in a world populated by characters who exist mainly to validate him. For a newcomer to RTS games, Re-Legion is actually a reasonable entry point. The UI introduces one unit type per mission, the district system is intuitive, and the lack of base-building removes a major complexity barrier. If you have ever been curious about the genre but bounced off StarCraft-style macro demands, this is a softer landing. For genre veterans, the shallow AI and absent order-queue will feel like a step back from titles released a decade earlier. The Metacritic score of 55 is a fair register of the gap between concept and execution. Diego, Scout Team

Re-Legion
ActionIndieRPGStrategy

Re-Legion

Jan 31, 2019Ice Code GamesFulqrum Publishing
GamerScout Says

A cyberpunk RTS with one genuinely clever idea - converting street civilians into cult soldiers - that a 55 Metacritic score and weak AI undercut before the campaign is half over.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

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About Re-Legion

My first honest reaction to Re-Legion was cautious optimism: a no-barracks RTS set in a neon-soaked technocracy where humans are the resource is the kind of mechanical twist that makes a strategy nerd sit up straight. The core loop has you guiding prophet Elion through an isometric cyberpunk city, preaching to grey-suited civilians and anointing them into unit roles - hackers stationed at crypto banks to pull in CryptoCredits, healers praying at temples to generate faith, Fanatics and Purifiers pushed toward the front line. Two parallel resource tracks, a population cap tied to how many districts you control, and a dogma tree that lets you lean into different creed styles: on paper, this is a lean, focused RTS premise worth taking seriously. The district-control structure works similarly to point-capture RTS design - you seize a building or statue and the surrounding district flips, expanding your follower cap and resource nodes. There is no base building whatsoever, which keeps the city feeling alive and removes the turtling habits that plague slower RTS players. The Holy Wars skirmish mode, added post-launch, lets you pick a creed and fight AI cults for city domination outside the campaign, which meaningfully extends the package beyond the nine story missions. Each creed carries its own dogma tree and skill set, so there is at least a structural argument for replaying with a different religious philosophy. The atmosphere genuinely delivers: the soundtrack is one of the most consistently praised elements across reviews, and the visual design - neon signage, temple statues, laser fire tearing through crowds - holds up as a coherent aesthetic. Here is where the spreadsheet gets ugly. The enemy AI follows repetitive patterns that experienced RTS players will read after one engagement, and a blob of ranged units defeats most threats without meaningful tactical adjustment. Pathfinding is a persistent problem: units clump at geometry, civilians pile up at metro entrances, and there is no order queuing with the Shift key - a control omission that punishes the micro-management the game constantly demands. The nine-mission campaign runs roughly seven hours at a median pace, and while creed choice introduces minor variation, the mission structure stays locked to the same wipe-or-capture formula throughout. No multiplayer exists. The writing around Elion is weak; he is positioned as a strategic genius in a world populated by characters who exist mainly to validate him. For a newcomer to RTS games, Re-Legion is actually a reasonable entry point. The UI introduces one unit type per mission, the district system is intuitive, and the lack of base-building removes a major complexity barrier. If you have ever been curious about the genre but bounced off StarCraft-style macro demands, this is a softer landing. For genre veterans, the shallow AI and absent order-queue will feel like a step back from titles released a decade earlier. The Metacritic score of 55 is a fair register of the gap between concept and execution. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Cult ManagementDistrict ControlNo Base BuildingDogma TreePost-Launch SkirmishHuman Resource SystemRTS Newcomer-Friendly

Steam Deck & Linux

ProtonDB Platinum

Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 5 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 / 8 / 8.1 / 10 installed on SSD
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
6 GB available space
Graphics
Geforce GTX 760 2GB VRAM
Processor
i3-4150 (or AMD equivalent)
Sound Card
DirectX® 11.0 compatible
Additional Notes
Game requires Microsoft Foundation

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 installed on SSD
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
6 GB available space
Graphics
Geforce GTX 1050 Ti 2GB VRAM
Processor
i5-4690K (or AMD equivalent)
Sound Card
DirectX® 11.0 compatible
Additional Notes
Game requires Microsoft Foundation

DLC & Add-ons for Re-Legion1

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Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
55

Game Info

Developer
Ice Code Games
Publisher
Fulqrum Publishing
Release Date
Jan 31, 2019

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Price History

2026-06-100.76(lowest)

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What platforms is Re-Legion available on?

Re-Legion is available on PC.

When was Re-Legion released?

Re-Legion was released on 31 January 2019.

Who developed Re-Legion?

Re-Legion was developed by Ice Code Games and published by Fulqrum Publishing.

Is Re-Legion worth buying?

Re-Legion holds a Metacritic score of 55/100, making it one of the standout Action titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.