Compare Scythe: Digital Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by The Knights of Unity. Published by Asmodee Digital. Released on 9/5/2018. Available on PC. Genres: Strategy.

A faithful digital port of the beloved board game, Scythe drops you into a diesel-punk 1920s Europe where resource management and mech warfare collide in a tight, asymmetric strategy experience.

Scythe: Digital Edition is a turn-based strategy game adapted from Jamey Stappleton's widely celebrated tabletop original. Set in an alternate-history 1920s Europa still bleeding from the First World War, it puts you in command of one of five asymmetric factions, each with distinct starting positions, mech abilities, and player mats that fundamentally change how you sequence your actions. This is not a wargame with a thin economy layer bolted on. It is a resource-conversion engine where combat is almost a distraction from your real agenda: hitting the right combination of objectives, upgrades, and territory markers to trigger the end-game scoring before anyone else is ready for it. The core loop revolves around four paired actions per turn. You pick a row on your player mat, take the top action (move, bolster, trade, produce), and optionally pay resources to take the paired bottom action (deploy a mech, enlist a recruit, build a structure, upgrade a stat). Every decision compounds. A recruit unlocked early cascades into bonus coins every time a rival does the same action. An upgrade makes your bottom actions cheaper, which accelerates your entire engine. If you have a colour-coded spreadsheet brain, this game will reward you lavishly. If you are newer to engine-builders, the digital version's AI opponents at lower difficulty settings give you enough room to experiment without punishing every misplay. AI quality is serviceable but not exceptional. The bots handle the rules cleanly and will punish obvious mistakes, yet experienced strategy players will outpace them on higher difficulties through pure engine optimization rather than reading opponent intent. Multiplayer is where the design truly breathes, partly because human opponents actually bluff, partly because the five factions (Rusviet, Crimea, Saxony, Polania, Nordic) create genuinely different table dynamics depending on who is sitting across from you. The Factory at the center of the map adds a sixth action option that every faction scrambles for mid-game, and controlling it is less about domination and more about timing your arrival to convert it into the final engine piece you needed. On the downside, the tutorial is functional but front-loaded. It explains mechanics sequentially without giving you a sense of the pacing or when star placement actually becomes urgent. New players will likely need to lose one full game before the interconnected systems click into place, which is a real ask in a match that runs 45 to 90 minutes. The UI, while clean, is not particularly intuitive for tracking opponent progress at a glance, which matters enormously in a game where your primary win condition is knowing when to trigger the end before a rival does. The mod and expansion ecosystem is limited compared to what the board game community has produced, and the lack of all expansions in the base product is a visible gap for tabletop fans who have played with the Invaders from Afar factions. For the strategy audience, the honest sell is this: if you want something that rewards planning several turns out, punishes tunnel vision, and ends every session with a debrief argument about what you should have built first, Scythe delivers that reliably. It is not a grand strategy sandbox with endless replayability hooks, but it is a tightly balanced competitive puzzle that respects your time without dumbing down its systems. Diego, Scout Team

Scythe: Digital Edition
Strategy

Scythe: Digital Edition

Sep 5, 2018The Knights of UnityAsmodee Digital
GamerScout Says

A faithful digital port of the beloved board game, Scythe drops you into a diesel-punk 1920s Europe where resource management and mech warfare collide in a tight, asymmetric strategy experience.

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About Scythe: Digital Edition

Scythe: Digital Edition is a turn-based strategy game adapted from Jamey Stappleton's widely celebrated tabletop original. Set in an alternate-history 1920s Europa still bleeding from the First World War, it puts you in command of one of five asymmetric factions, each with distinct starting positions, mech abilities, and player mats that fundamentally change how you sequence your actions. This is not a wargame with a thin economy layer bolted on. It is a resource-conversion engine where combat is almost a distraction from your real agenda: hitting the right combination of objectives, upgrades, and territory markers to trigger the end-game scoring before anyone else is ready for it. The core loop revolves around four paired actions per turn. You pick a row on your player mat, take the top action (move, bolster, trade, produce), and optionally pay resources to take the paired bottom action (deploy a mech, enlist a recruit, build a structure, upgrade a stat). Every decision compounds. A recruit unlocked early cascades into bonus coins every time a rival does the same action. An upgrade makes your bottom actions cheaper, which accelerates your entire engine. If you have a colour-coded spreadsheet brain, this game will reward you lavishly. If you are newer to engine-builders, the digital version's AI opponents at lower difficulty settings give you enough room to experiment without punishing every misplay. AI quality is serviceable but not exceptional. The bots handle the rules cleanly and will punish obvious mistakes, yet experienced strategy players will outpace them on higher difficulties through pure engine optimization rather than reading opponent intent. Multiplayer is where the design truly breathes, partly because human opponents actually bluff, partly because the five factions (Rusviet, Crimea, Saxony, Polania, Nordic) create genuinely different table dynamics depending on who is sitting across from you. The Factory at the center of the map adds a sixth action option that every faction scrambles for mid-game, and controlling it is less about domination and more about timing your arrival to convert it into the final engine piece you needed. On the downside, the tutorial is functional but front-loaded. It explains mechanics sequentially without giving you a sense of the pacing or when star placement actually becomes urgent. New players will likely need to lose one full game before the interconnected systems click into place, which is a real ask in a match that runs 45 to 90 minutes. The UI, while clean, is not particularly intuitive for tracking opponent progress at a glance, which matters enormously in a game where your primary win condition is knowing when to trigger the end before a rival does. The mod and expansion ecosystem is limited compared to what the board game community has produced, and the lack of all expansions in the base product is a visible gap for tabletop fans who have played with the Invaders from Afar factions. For the strategy audience, the honest sell is this: if you want something that rewards planning several turns out, punishes tunnel vision, and ends every session with a debrief argument about what you should have built first, Scythe delivers that reliably. It is not a grand strategy sandbox with endless replayability hooks, but it is a tightly balanced competitive puzzle that respects your time without dumbing down its systems. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamAsymmetric FactionsEngine BuilderBoard Game AdaptationTurn-BasedResource ManagementDiesel-PunkCompetitive MultiplayerTabletop Port

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
89%(3,786)

Game Info

Developer
The Knights of Unity
Publisher
Asmodee Digital
Release Date
Sep 5, 2018

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