Compare The Dark Queen of Mortholme prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Mosu. Published by Monster Theater. Released on 8/15/2025. Available on PC, Linux. Genres: Action, Casual, Indie.

Playing the final boss has never stung this quietly. A 20-minute pixel gut-punch about stagnation, persistence, and what it costs to be immovable while everything around you changes.

I've spent years writing about small games that nobody covers, and occasionally one lands that reframes something you thought you understood about the medium. The Dark Queen of Mortholme is one of those. Solo developer Mosu Äijälä calls it an "anti-game," and that framing is honest: the fights are a vessel, not the point. You are the final boss. The hero shows up, you one-shot them with your great mace, you burn the body with a purple flame. And then they come back. And back. And back. The combat sits inside a single fixed throne room. You move horizontally, wield a small arsenal of heavy Queen's attacks, and watch the rhythm of each fight shift under you. That shift is the whole design. The hero arrives with a shiny new sword, then a dodge roll, then armor that absorbs your hits differently. You stay exactly the same. Your moveset, your speed, your domain: frozen. The pixel art sells the asymmetry beautifully. The Queen looms large in moody black, purple, and red, her spiked crown catching the candlelight that flickers around the throne room walls. The hero is small, bright, and relentlessly cheerful. The character contrast is doing thematic work before a single word of dialogue lands. And the dialogue is where the game lives. Between each encounter, you choose how the Queen responds to the hero's declarations. The choices shift tone rather than outcome: cruelty, dismissal, grudging curiosity, something that quietly becomes warmer than either party intended. The Queen believes in permanence, in the fixed order of things. The hero believes in growth through failure, in the Souls-player logic of "I will learn your patterns until you have no more to teach me." Watching the Queen's written responses drift from contempt toward something closer to grief is the game's real arc, and Mosu handles it with a lightness that never tips into sentimentality. There is a second phase to the final confrontation that I will not describe here, except to say that it earns its moment. The haunting score holds the whole thing together, spare and dark, tuned to the specific mood of watching something eternal begin to doubt itself. Fair criticisms exist. The gameplay is genuinely thin. Three attacks, horizontal movement, an opponent whose increasing strength is mostly communicated through dialogue and visible equipment upgrades rather than meaningfully harder mechanical play. Reviewers with action-game expectations have found the controls clunky, and that is not wrong. If you come for a boss-fight power fantasy, you will be lightly bored. The game is also very short, somewhere between 20 and 45 minutes depending on your pace, with three endings available across replays for anyone who wants to follow the dialogue branches. The value question is real. What you are paying for is a single emotional argument, made precisely, with no wasted space. For players who love games that know exactly what they want to say and end before saying it twice, this is the kind of handcrafted thing worth protecting. It holds a Steam rating well into the "Very Positive" range across thousands of reviews, which, for something this small and this weird, feels like a minor miracle. The writing is good. The pixel art is intentional. The soundscape holds the room together like candlewax holds a wick. Play it once for the story, play it again to see what the other Queen looks like. Kai, Scout Team

The Dark Queen of Mortholme
ActionCasualIndie

The Dark Queen of Mortholme

Aug 15, 2025MosuMonster Theater
GamerScout Says

Playing the final boss has never stung this quietly. A 20-minute pixel gut-punch about stagnation, persistence, and what it costs to be immovable while everything around you changes.

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About The Dark Queen of Mortholme

I've spent years writing about small games that nobody covers, and occasionally one lands that reframes something you thought you understood about the medium. The Dark Queen of Mortholme is one of those. Solo developer Mosu Äijälä calls it an "anti-game," and that framing is honest: the fights are a vessel, not the point. You are the final boss. The hero shows up, you one-shot them with your great mace, you burn the body with a purple flame. And then they come back. And back. And back. The combat sits inside a single fixed throne room. You move horizontally, wield a small arsenal of heavy Queen's attacks, and watch the rhythm of each fight shift under you. That shift is the whole design. The hero arrives with a shiny new sword, then a dodge roll, then armor that absorbs your hits differently. You stay exactly the same. Your moveset, your speed, your domain: frozen. The pixel art sells the asymmetry beautifully. The Queen looms large in moody black, purple, and red, her spiked crown catching the candlelight that flickers around the throne room walls. The hero is small, bright, and relentlessly cheerful. The character contrast is doing thematic work before a single word of dialogue lands. And the dialogue is where the game lives. Between each encounter, you choose how the Queen responds to the hero's declarations. The choices shift tone rather than outcome: cruelty, dismissal, grudging curiosity, something that quietly becomes warmer than either party intended. The Queen believes in permanence, in the fixed order of things. The hero believes in growth through failure, in the Souls-player logic of "I will learn your patterns until you have no more to teach me." Watching the Queen's written responses drift from contempt toward something closer to grief is the game's real arc, and Mosu handles it with a lightness that never tips into sentimentality. There is a second phase to the final confrontation that I will not describe here, except to say that it earns its moment. The haunting score holds the whole thing together, spare and dark, tuned to the specific mood of watching something eternal begin to doubt itself. Fair criticisms exist. The gameplay is genuinely thin. Three attacks, horizontal movement, an opponent whose increasing strength is mostly communicated through dialogue and visible equipment upgrades rather than meaningfully harder mechanical play. Reviewers with action-game expectations have found the controls clunky, and that is not wrong. If you come for a boss-fight power fantasy, you will be lightly bored. The game is also very short, somewhere between 20 and 45 minutes depending on your pace, with three endings available across replays for anyone who wants to follow the dialogue branches. The value question is real. What you are paying for is a single emotional argument, made precisely, with no wasted space. For players who love games that know exactly what they want to say and end before saying it twice, this is the kind of handcrafted thing worth protecting. It holds a Steam rating well into the "Very Positive" range across thousands of reviews, which, for something this small and this weird, feels like a minor miracle. The writing is good. The pixel art is intentional. The soundscape holds the room together like candlewax holds a wick. Play it once for the story, play it again to see what the other Queen looks like. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardstier:sub-5Villain ProtagonistNarrative-FirstAnti-GameBoss POVMultiple EndingsDialogue ChoicesFixed-ScreenMetanarrativeSoulslike Themes

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 9 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 10, and 11
Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
200 MB available space
Graphics
128 MB

Recommended

OS
Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8, 10, and 11
Memory
3 GB RAM
Storage
200 MB available space
Graphics
512 MB
Processor
2GHZ+

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Game Info

Developer
Mosu
Publisher
Monster Theater
Release Date
Aug 15, 2025

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What platforms is The Dark Queen of Mortholme available on?

The Dark Queen of Mortholme is available on PC, Linux.

When was The Dark Queen of Mortholme released?

The Dark Queen of Mortholme was released on 15 August 2025.

Who developed The Dark Queen of Mortholme?

The Dark Queen of Mortholme was developed by Mosu and published by Monster Theater.