
SpaceBourne 2
One solo developer built a galaxy-spanning RPG with faction warfare, ship dogfighting, and on-foot dungeon crawling. The ambition is real. So are the rough edges.
GamerScout Verdict
Best for space-RPG fans who want grand-strategy depth and can stomach solo-dev rough edges in the ground combat and UI.
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About SpaceBourne 2
My spreadsheet instincts kicked in about two hours into SpaceBourne 2, when I realized I was simultaneously tracking diplomacy standing with three Starlord houses, queuing Miner's Guild contracts, and deciding which ship hardpoints to prioritize before the next faction skirmish. That is a lot of systems for any studio to ship. The fact that a single developer, Burak Dabak, built all of it is either inspiring or alarming depending on how patient you are with uneven execution. The core loop is genuinely multi-layered. You pilot ships in first- or third-person across a procedurally generated galaxy of tens of thousands of solar systems, each with planets, asteroid belts, derelict stations, and roaming factions. When you land, you leave the cockpit entirely and run on-foot third-person shooter missions through bases, caves, and cities. The faction and diplomacy layer sits above all of that: you can establish your own faction, set internal policies and governing structure, expand by capturing stations and solar systems, and manage Starlord relationships that shift the entire diplomatic map. That is closer to a grand-strategy sandbox than most space sims attempt. Class progression adds another axis, with subclasses, a perk tree, and a talent system under an Adventurer tab that cross-pollinates XP from every activity. Post-launch patches have overhauled class balancing and added a scanner system that surfaces new points of interest in space, which shows the developer is iterating in a useful direction. Where the seams show up is consistent across every review I tracked. Ground combat is the weakest link: enemies absorb too many bullets, hitboxes are unreliable, and character AI can be embarrassingly passive. Voice acting for secondary characters leans heavily on text-to-speech quality, and grammar issues in dialogue crop up in ways that break immersion mid-conversation. Dungeon designs suffer from the same save-restriction problem that has frustrated players since launch, specifically the inability to save mid-dungeon across multiple floors. The UI is dense enough that it will turn off anyone who bounces off menus. Recent Steam data shows the game sitting at Mostly Positive overall but dipping toward Mixed in recent short-term reviews, which suggests the 1.0 release resolved some long-standing bugs but introduced fresh friction. Here is the case for newcomers specifically, because I know strategy-adjacent players will ask. The tutorial is surprisingly thorough by space sim standards. Players coming from Elite Dangerous or X4 who have rage-quit onboarding before will find SpaceBourne 2 considerably more hand-holding in the early hours. The Freelance Guild and Mining Guild serve as structured early-game income rails that prevent the aimless drift common in open-universe games. Full gamepad support was added post-launch if keyboard and mouse controls feel overwhelming. The game does reward patience: the empire-building endgame, where you are managing territory, fleet composition, and multi-faction diplomacy simultaneously, is the kind of late-game depth that most space RPGs never reach. If you treat the first ten hours as a rough onboarding stretch and not a finished product, the systems that open up afterward justify the investment. SpaceBourne 2 is not a polished product and it does not pretend to be. It is one person's attempt to build a genre hybrid that normally takes a full studio, and the result is uneven but often remarkable. Space sim fans who can tolerate jank in exchange for genuine sandbox depth and a developer who patches consistently will find more here than the rough exterior suggests. Anyone expecting tight, responsive gunplay or cinematic presentation should look elsewhere.

Strategy & simulation
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7/8/10 64-bit
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 11
- Storage
- 22 GB available space
- Graphics
- Nvidia GeForce GTX 780 (3 GB) or AMD Radeon R9 290 (4GB)
- Processor
- Intel Core i5-2500K@2.9GHz or AMD FX 6300@2.9GHz
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 7/8/10 64-bit
- Memory
- 16 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 11
- Storage
- 22 GB available space
- Graphics
- vidia GeForce GTX 1060 (6 GB) or AMD Radeon RX 580 (8GB)
- Processor
- Intel Core i7-4770K@3.5GHz or Ryzen 5 1500X@3.5GHz
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Game Info
- Developer
- Burak Dabak
- Publisher
- Burak Dabak
- Release Date
- Nov 18, 2025