Compare Seafarer: The Ship Sim prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by astragon Development. Published by astragon Entertainment. Released on 10/7/2025. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Simulation, Early Access.

Gorgeous waves, a functional RADAR on the bridge, and a career split between cargo hauling and sea rescue - but Mixed Steam reviews and thin onboarding make this a judgment call for patience-first sim fans.

My spreadsheet instincts kicked in the moment I saw Seafarer's faction structure: Crescentport Logistics for cargo work, Tide Guard for patrol and firefighting, each with its own ship roster and mission types. That's a workable skeleton for a progression sim. The problem is that right now, at this stage of Early Access, the skeleton is showing more than the flesh around it. The core vessel handling is the game's strongest argument for a purchase. Each ship carries genuine weight and inertia, and the handling differences between the nimble tugboat Bernhard and the bulkier cargo ferry Herbert are noticeable and satisfying. The bridge equipment is not just decorative either - the RADAR and ECDIS are functional instruments, and you can walk off the bridge, descend to the engine room, operate cargo cranes, and deploy water cannons during firefighting runs. That hands-on ship interaction is rarer than it should be in the genre, and astragon Development deserves credit for committing to it. The WaveWorks 2.0 wave simulation gives the water real texture, and watching a storm roll in during a night crossing is genuinely atmospheric. The problems, though, are hard to wave off. The tutorial is the weakest point in the whole package. Complex operations like crane rigging and cargo securing offer almost no in-game guidance, and several reviewers reported being unable to complete introductory missions because the game simply does not explain its own systems. For a sim that wants to sit between casual and hardcore, that gap in onboarding is a serious barrier. Compound that with performance issues that bite even on high-end rigs, and some bugs that break mission progression, and you have a pattern that will push a meaningful slice of buyers to a refund. Mission repetition surfaces quickly too - cargo runs blur into each other, and the current story mode launched with very limited campaign content, though the Immersion Update has since added a reworked campaign and new inspection and radio mechanics, which shows the team is actually iterating. The roadmap is worth reading before you decide. Update 4, the Career Update, is planned for Q2 and introduces a dedicated "My Career" progression feature. Update 5, planned for Q3, brings co-op multiplayer. The world map is fictional, inspired by North European coastlines, which disappointed players expecting real-geography navigation like Flight Simulator offers, so manage that expectation upfront. The game is also tagged Moddable on Steam, which is a long-term positive signal for a sim with this much interactive ship detail, but mod tooling is not mature yet. For sim fans who specifically want a maritime career game - there has been essentially nothing in this space for fifteen years - the underlying loop has real pull if you can tolerate an unfinished product. For anyone outside that narrow group, the current Mixed reception is an accurate temperature reading. Wait for the Career Update at minimum, then reassess the review curve. Diego, Scout Team

Seafarer: The Ship Sim
CasualSimulationEarly Access

Seafarer: The Ship Sim

Oct 7, 2025astragon Developmentastragon Entertainment
GamerScout Says

Gorgeous waves, a functional RADAR on the bridge, and a career split between cargo hauling and sea rescue - but Mixed Steam reviews and thin onboarding make this a judgment call for patience-first sim fans.

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About Seafarer: The Ship Sim

My spreadsheet instincts kicked in the moment I saw Seafarer's faction structure: Crescentport Logistics for cargo work, Tide Guard for patrol and firefighting, each with its own ship roster and mission types. That's a workable skeleton for a progression sim. The problem is that right now, at this stage of Early Access, the skeleton is showing more than the flesh around it. The core vessel handling is the game's strongest argument for a purchase. Each ship carries genuine weight and inertia, and the handling differences between the nimble tugboat Bernhard and the bulkier cargo ferry Herbert are noticeable and satisfying. The bridge equipment is not just decorative either - the RADAR and ECDIS are functional instruments, and you can walk off the bridge, descend to the engine room, operate cargo cranes, and deploy water cannons during firefighting runs. That hands-on ship interaction is rarer than it should be in the genre, and astragon Development deserves credit for committing to it. The WaveWorks 2.0 wave simulation gives the water real texture, and watching a storm roll in during a night crossing is genuinely atmospheric. The problems, though, are hard to wave off. The tutorial is the weakest point in the whole package. Complex operations like crane rigging and cargo securing offer almost no in-game guidance, and several reviewers reported being unable to complete introductory missions because the game simply does not explain its own systems. For a sim that wants to sit between casual and hardcore, that gap in onboarding is a serious barrier. Compound that with performance issues that bite even on high-end rigs, and some bugs that break mission progression, and you have a pattern that will push a meaningful slice of buyers to a refund. Mission repetition surfaces quickly too - cargo runs blur into each other, and the current story mode launched with very limited campaign content, though the Immersion Update has since added a reworked campaign and new inspection and radio mechanics, which shows the team is actually iterating. The roadmap is worth reading before you decide. Update 4, the Career Update, is planned for Q2 and introduces a dedicated "My Career" progression feature. Update 5, planned for Q3, brings co-op multiplayer. The world map is fictional, inspired by North European coastlines, which disappointed players expecting real-geography navigation like Flight Simulator offers, so manage that expectation upfront. The game is also tagged Moddable on Steam, which is a long-term positive signal for a sim with this much interactive ship detail, but mod tooling is not mature yet. For sim fans who specifically want a maritime career game - there has been essentially nothing in this space for fifteen years - the underlying loop has real pull if you can tolerate an unfinished product. For anyone outside that narrow group, the current Mixed reception is an accurate temperature reading. Wait for the Career Update at minimum, then reassess the review curve. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:indieCareer ProgressionFaction SystemWalkable ShipsEngine Room SimulationDynamic WeatherFirefighting MissionsCargo HaulingCo-op PlannedModdable

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Gold

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 4 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 64-Bit
Memory
16 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Storage
40 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060 (6 GB) or AMD Radeon RX 580 (8 GB)
Processor
Intel Core i3-12100F (3.3Ghz) or AMD Ryzen 3 3100 (3.6 Ghz)
Additional Notes
(Please note: A dedicated graphics card is requiured.)

Recommended

OS
64-bit Windows 11
Memory
64 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Storage
40 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 (12 GB) or AMD Radeon RX 7950 (16 GB)
Processor
AMD Ryzen 9 7900 (12 Core) or Intel equivalent
Additional Notes
(Please note: A dedicated graphics card is requiured.)

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Game Info

Developer
astragon Development
Publisher
astragon Entertainment
Release Date
Oct 7, 2025

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Seafarer: The Ship Sim is available on PC.

When was Seafarer: The Ship Sim released?

Seafarer: The Ship Sim was released on 7 October 2025.

Who developed Seafarer: The Ship Sim?

Seafarer: The Ship Sim was developed by astragon Development and published by astragon Entertainment.