Compare Stronghold: Definitive Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Firefly Studios. Published by Firefly Studios. Released on 11/7/2023. Available on PC. Genres: Simulation, Strategy. Metacritic score: 80/100.

Forget what the sequels did to this series. The 2001 original is still the cleanest castle sim ever made, and this remaster finally gives it the modern wrapper it deserved for two decades.

I have a folder on my hard drive that still contains the original Stronghold HD shortcut, and the reason I never deleted it is the same reason this Definitive Edition immediately clicked for me: the design is tight in a way that most modern city-builders are not. You run a medieval economy from the granary up, queuing woodcutters, ox-tethers, and apple orchards before you ever think about raising a wall. Then the walls matter. Then the archers on those walls matter. Then the pitch ditches in front of those walls matter. The decision tree is short enough to learn in an afternoon and deep enough to still surprise you after thirty hours. Firefly rebuilt everything here using the original source artwork, which means the visual overhaul feels coherent rather than grafted on. Animations are smoother, textures sharper, and the isometric presentation has aged into something almost charming rather than dated. The soundtrack got a similar treatment, with fresh recordings that sit noticeably above the tinny MIDI loops of the 2001 release. Quality-of-life additions are exactly what they should be: WASD camera movement, modern mouse controls, a persistent mission-objective toggle, and improved UI scaling. None of these feel bolted on. After an hour you genuinely cannot remember the game ever lacking them. The content package is generous for a remaster at this price tier. The original military and economic campaigns both return across 26 missions, and a brand-new 14-mission narrative campaign designed by Firefly founders Simon Bradbury and Eric Ouellette adds fresh scenarios that push the raised unit and building caps hard. Expect large-scale defensive holds and assault missions where your landing party is badly outnumbered. A separate Castle Trail adds 10 historical siege scenarios on top of that. The four iconic villain AI lords, the Rat, the Pig, the Snake, and the Wolf, are back with their original personalities intact, and the Wolf in particular still plays the full system against you in a way that passes for genuinely threatening. Critics have called it "nostalgic charm meets sensible modernization" and that reads accurately from where I sit. The honest criticisms are real but specific. Offensive siege missions remain the weakest mode in the game: limited unit counts make some assaults feel like puzzle-boxes with one correct solution rather than tactical sandboxes, and players who come in wanting an aggressive RTS will keep bumping into that wall. The absence of a full free-play skirmish mode against AI opponents is the loudest community complaint, and it is a fair one given how well the higher unit caps would serve that format. Steam multiplayer support for up to 8 players is a major improvement over the original's LAN-era setup, but at launch there were reports of lag and disconnect issues that dampened competitive sessions. Whether those have been resolved is worth a quick check of recent community threads before you commit to an online-focused purchase. Steam Workshop integration is present and the mod community is active, which adds considerable runway for custom scenarios once you clear the official content. For newcomers, the campaign structure functions as a slow-drip tutorial that hands you buildings one at a time, starting with deer hunting for food and working up to bread production chains, stone quarries, and crossbow manufacture before full castle warfare clicks into place. That pacing is patient enough that genre beginners can find their footing without feeling talked down to. Strategy veterans can skip ahead, crank the difficulty, and let the Wolf remind them that complacency is expensive. The Metacritic score of 80 and a Steam user rating holding around 83-86 percent positive across nearly ten thousand reviews tells a consistent story: this is a faithful, well-executed remaster of a genuine genre landmark, not a cash-in re-release. Diego, Scout Team

Stronghold: Definitive Edition
SimulationStrategy

Stronghold: Definitive Edition

Nov 7, 2023Firefly Studios
GamerScout Says

Forget what the sequels did to this series. The 2001 original is still the cleanest castle sim ever made, and this remaster finally gives it the modern wrapper it deserved for two decades.

PC
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $5.51

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Stronghold: Definitive Edition

I have a folder on my hard drive that still contains the original Stronghold HD shortcut, and the reason I never deleted it is the same reason this Definitive Edition immediately clicked for me: the design is tight in a way that most modern city-builders are not. You run a medieval economy from the granary up, queuing woodcutters, ox-tethers, and apple orchards before you ever think about raising a wall. Then the walls matter. Then the archers on those walls matter. Then the pitch ditches in front of those walls matter. The decision tree is short enough to learn in an afternoon and deep enough to still surprise you after thirty hours. Firefly rebuilt everything here using the original source artwork, which means the visual overhaul feels coherent rather than grafted on. Animations are smoother, textures sharper, and the isometric presentation has aged into something almost charming rather than dated. The soundtrack got a similar treatment, with fresh recordings that sit noticeably above the tinny MIDI loops of the 2001 release. Quality-of-life additions are exactly what they should be: WASD camera movement, modern mouse controls, a persistent mission-objective toggle, and improved UI scaling. None of these feel bolted on. After an hour you genuinely cannot remember the game ever lacking them. The content package is generous for a remaster at this price tier. The original military and economic campaigns both return across 26 missions, and a brand-new 14-mission narrative campaign designed by Firefly founders Simon Bradbury and Eric Ouellette adds fresh scenarios that push the raised unit and building caps hard. Expect large-scale defensive holds and assault missions where your landing party is badly outnumbered. A separate Castle Trail adds 10 historical siege scenarios on top of that. The four iconic villain AI lords, the Rat, the Pig, the Snake, and the Wolf, are back with their original personalities intact, and the Wolf in particular still plays the full system against you in a way that passes for genuinely threatening. Critics have called it "nostalgic charm meets sensible modernization" and that reads accurately from where I sit. The honest criticisms are real but specific. Offensive siege missions remain the weakest mode in the game: limited unit counts make some assaults feel like puzzle-boxes with one correct solution rather than tactical sandboxes, and players who come in wanting an aggressive RTS will keep bumping into that wall. The absence of a full free-play skirmish mode against AI opponents is the loudest community complaint, and it is a fair one given how well the higher unit caps would serve that format. Steam multiplayer support for up to 8 players is a major improvement over the original's LAN-era setup, but at launch there were reports of lag and disconnect issues that dampened competitive sessions. Whether those have been resolved is worth a quick check of recent community threads before you commit to an online-focused purchase. Steam Workshop integration is present and the mod community is active, which adds considerable runway for custom scenarios once you clear the official content. For newcomers, the campaign structure functions as a slow-drip tutorial that hands you buildings one at a time, starting with deer hunting for food and working up to bread production chains, stone quarries, and crossbow manufacture before full castle warfare clicks into place. That pacing is patient enough that genre beginners can find their footing without feeling talked down to. Strategy veterans can skip ahead, crank the difficulty, and let the Wolf remind them that complacency is expensive. The Metacritic score of 80 and a Steam user rating holding around 83-86 percent positive across nearly ten thousand reviews tells a consistent story: this is a faithful, well-executed remaster of a genuine genre landmark, not a cash-in re-release. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvpachievementstrading-cardsworkshopcloud-savestier:aaaCastle SimProduction ChainsEconomic CampaignSiege MissionsRemasterAI Lords8-Player MultiplayerWASD ControlsMap EditorMedieval Economy

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 44 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10/11 64 Bit
Memory
6 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
4 GB available space
Graphics
Graphics Card with 2GB VRAM (for 1080p) or 3GB VRAM (for 1440p) or 4GB VRAM (for 4k)
Processor
Intel® Core™ i3-3220 or equivalent

DLC & Add-ons for Stronghold: Definitive Edition3

Expansions, DLC packs and add-on content for this game. Click any item to see store offers.

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Stronghold: Definitive Edition.

Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
80

Game Info

Developer
Firefly Studios
Publisher
Firefly Studios
Release Date
Nov 7, 2023

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

Price History

2026-06-105.51(lowest)

More from Firefly Studios

Buy smarter: helpful guides

Looking for more? See games like Stronghold: Definitive Edition

Frequently asked questions about Stronghold: Definitive Edition

How much does Stronghold: Definitive Edition cost?

Stronghold: Definitive Edition pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock key and store offers across 50+ verified shops, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

Where can I buy Stronghold: Definitive Edition cheapest?

Compare Stronghold: Definitive Edition prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Stronghold: Definitive Edition available on?

Stronghold: Definitive Edition is available on PC.

When was Stronghold: Definitive Edition released?

Stronghold: Definitive Edition was released on 7 November 2023.

Who developed Stronghold: Definitive Edition?

Stronghold: Definitive Edition was developed by Firefly Studios.

Is Stronghold: Definitive Edition worth buying?

Stronghold: Definitive Edition holds a Metacritic score of 80/100, making it one of the standout Simulation titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.