
Rogue State
Survive 60 turns as a newly crowned Middle Eastern president while four rival factions, a scheming brother, and the occasional chicken dictator try to end your reign. Compact, punishing, and oddly compelling.
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About Rogue State
I went into Rogue State expecting a budget Democracy clone and came out three failed runs later genuinely annoyed at my own bad policy decisions. That tension is the whole game in miniature. You play as the freshly installed president of Basenji, a fictional Middle Eastern nation still smouldering from revolution, and your single objective is to hold power for 60 turns without being toppled by coups, economic collapse, or an invasion you did not see coming. It is a tight, opaque, turn-based political sim that sits closer to a roguelite puzzle than to any grand-strategy sandbox. The mechanical core revolves around four domestic factions: Patriots, Capitalists, Fundamentalists, and Liberals. Every policy slider you touch - alcohol laws, minimum wage, public executions, death penalty - pleases one group and alienates at least one other. Managing that web while also expanding infrastructure across three tech branches (security, social, economic), signing trade deals with up to eight randomized neighbors, maintaining a budget that does not crater, and pushing one of six clandestine projects to completion is genuinely demanding work. The game is fully turn-based with no time pressure mid-turn, so you do have room to think, but the random-event deck is merciless. Plagues, sneak attacks on your hospitals, absurdist curveballs like bipedal mechs running loose, and impossible minister requests can derail even a tight strategy. Reviewers and players consistently flagged this randomness as both the game's charm and its main frustration. The difficulty on default settings is steep enough that multiple reviewers admitted failing to win for several runs. Here is the case for newcomers despite all of that. Each campaign is short by strategy-game standards, a few hours at most, so a loss does not sting the way it does in a 40-hour Paradox run. The game includes Easy, Normal, Hard, and Endless modes, with the Hard setting gating behind an initial win to stop new players being immediately devoured. More importantly, the mechanics are opaque not because they are deep in a Crusader Kings sense, but because the tutorial does not explain interactions clearly enough. Once you grasp that your budget surplus dictates how many infrastructure purchases you can queue per turn, and that trading oil with neighbors early is almost always the right economic foundation, the game's logic clicks into place. That first win, earned rather than handed to you, lands with real satisfaction. What does not hold up as well in 2025 is the presentation layer. The UI was criticized at launch for inconsistent visual design and a stubborn refusal to support widescreen resolutions properly. The main play area is visually busy in a way that makes scanning for interactive elements harder than it needs to be. The writing and voice acting are a genuine highlight though, with a dry, tongue-in-cheek tone that makes disasters feel playful rather than punishing. The FMV-style news clips and the comic-book animation of your president wandering around the presidential office to consult different menus are charming touches that reviewers consistently praised. No mod ecosystem to speak of, no post-launch content updates of note, and the sequel Rogue State Revolution has since superseded it in scope. The original sits at a Metacritic score of 66 and a Steam user rating around 74-75 percent, which is an accurate read: better than the score implies for the right person, worse than the enthusiasm of fans suggests for everyone else. If you have already played the Revolution sequel and want the leaner, harder original, or if you are a political-sim obsessive who will not flinch at an unfriendly tutorial, Rogue State delivers a compact and replayable loop. Everyone else should probably start with Revolution instead. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
Steam Deck & Linux
Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 3 ProtonDB community reports.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 10, 8, 7, Vista, XP
- Memory
- 512 MB RAM
- Storage
- 1200 MB available space
- Graphics
- 32-bit SVGA Video card
- Processor
- 1.6 GHz
- Sound Card
- Supports all DirectX-compatible sound cards
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 10, 8, 7, Vista, XP
- Memory
- 1 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 9.0
- Storage
- 1200 MB available space
- Graphics
- 128 MB
- Processor
- 2 GHz
- Sound Card
- Supports all DirectX-compatible sound cards
Community Discussion
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Reviews & Ratings
Game Info
- Developer
- LRDGames, Inc.
- Publisher
- LRDGames, Inc.
- Release Date
- Oct 16, 2015
