Compare The Forest prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Endnight Games Ltd. Published by Endnight Games Ltd. Released on 4/30/2018. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie, Simulation. Metacritic score: 83/100.

Crash a plane, lose your son, then spend 30+ hours building spike traps and slowly losing your mind to cannibals. Solo or with up to 8 friends online, this one earns its Metacritic 83.

I've put more hours into The Forest than I care to admit, and the clearest sign it works is that I kept coming back after every death, not out of frustration but genuine curiosity about what came next. On the surface it's a first-person open-world survival game: chop trees, build shelters, manage hunger, thirst, and health. But Endnight layered something darker underneath all of that, and it makes the loop feel genuinely distinct from the dozen other survival sandboxes clogging up the genre. The day-night rhythm is the engine that keeps everything tense. Daylight hours are for chopping, building log cabins or full fortifications, stringing up spike traps and defensive walls, planting food beds, and exploring the island's surface for scraps and story clues. Night is when the cannibals come, and they are genuinely unsettling. Their AI has a pack mentality: flanking, watching from the tree line, sometimes just standing at the edge of your camp and staring. They don't always charge. Sometimes they just make sure you know they're there. The sanity mechanic ties into this atmosphere nicely. Spend too long in caves, eat the wrong things, or witness enough horror and your character starts to deteriorate in ways that bleed into the visual presentation. It's one of the more thoughtful implementations of an insanity system in a survival game. Crafting is a real high point too. The inventory lays your collected items out on a tarp and you physically rummage through them to combine things. It sounds trivial, but it gives the whole process a tactile weight that most games in the genre skip entirely. Weapons range from basic stick-and-stone axes all the way to explosive devices assembled from watches, circuit boards, and loose change. The story deserves a mention because it's better than most survival games bother with. You're searching for your son after a plane crash, and the narrative is seeded across abandoned camps, photographs, videotapes, and eventually a cave system that goes a lot deeper than the island suggests. It never holds your hand, and players who only build on the surface will miss most of it. That's a feature, not a flaw. One thing worth flagging for the co-op crowd: The Forest supports up to 8 players online on PC, and splitting resource gathering and base construction across a few friends significantly accelerates the early game. The mechanics slot together naturally in co-op, with one person building perimeter defenses while another scouts for food and a third maps the cave networks. The tradeoff is that the horror loses some of its teeth with company, since enemies don't scale up to match larger groups. Going in with two friends is probably the sweet spot. Critically, there is no split-screen option on PC, so the couch crowd will need separate machines. There's also no crossplay, so your group needs to be on the same platform. Weaknesses exist. The inventory UI gets cluttered fast, and the four hotkey slots feel stingy once your build complexity grows. Melee combat is functional but rough at the edges, especially early on when cannibal encounters can feel chaotic rather than skill-gated. The narrative resolution is odd enough to either delight or frustrate depending on your tolerance for ambiguity. These are genuine issues, but none of them undercut what makes The Forest worth your time: the slow escalation from peaceful woodcutter to fortified island survivor, the tension of a night raid on a well-built camp, and the nagging sense that the island is hiding something genuinely disturbing just below ground. Riley, Scout Team

The Forest

The Forest

Apr 30, 2018Endnight Games Ltd
GamerScout Says

Crash a plane, lose your son, then spend 30+ hours building spike traps and slowly losing your mind to cannibals. Solo or with up to 8 friends online, this one earns its Metacritic 83.

PC
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Gold
Best Price Available
€0.00
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Historical low: €0.86

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About The Forest

I've put more hours into The Forest than I care to admit, and the clearest sign it works is that I kept coming back after every death, not out of frustration but genuine curiosity about what came next. On the surface it's a first-person open-world survival game: chop trees, build shelters, manage hunger, thirst, and health. But Endnight layered something darker underneath all of that, and it makes the loop feel genuinely distinct from the dozen other survival sandboxes clogging up the genre. The day-night rhythm is the engine that keeps everything tense. Daylight hours are for chopping, building log cabins or full fortifications, stringing up spike traps and defensive walls, planting food beds, and exploring the island's surface for scraps and story clues. Night is when the cannibals come, and they are genuinely unsettling. Their AI has a pack mentality: flanking, watching from the tree line, sometimes just standing at the edge of your camp and staring. They don't always charge. Sometimes they just make sure you know they're there. The sanity mechanic ties into this atmosphere nicely. Spend too long in caves, eat the wrong things, or witness enough horror and your character starts to deteriorate in ways that bleed into the visual presentation. It's one of the more thoughtful implementations of an insanity system in a survival game. Crafting is a real high point too. The inventory lays your collected items out on a tarp and you physically rummage through them to combine things. It sounds trivial, but it gives the whole process a tactile weight that most games in the genre skip entirely. Weapons range from basic stick-and-stone axes all the way to explosive devices assembled from watches, circuit boards, and loose change. The story deserves a mention because it's better than most survival games bother with. You're searching for your son after a plane crash, and the narrative is seeded across abandoned camps, photographs, videotapes, and eventually a cave system that goes a lot deeper than the island suggests. It never holds your hand, and players who only build on the surface will miss most of it. That's a feature, not a flaw. One thing worth flagging for the co-op crowd: The Forest supports up to 8 players online on PC, and splitting resource gathering and base construction across a few friends significantly accelerates the early game. The mechanics slot together naturally in co-op, with one person building perimeter defenses while another scouts for food and a third maps the cave networks. The tradeoff is that the horror loses some of its teeth with company, since enemies don't scale up to match larger groups. Going in with two friends is probably the sweet spot. Critically, there is no split-screen option on PC, so the couch crowd will need separate machines. There's also no crossplay, so your group needs to be on the same platform. Weaknesses exist. The inventory UI gets cluttered fast, and the four hotkey slots feel stingy once your build complexity grows. Melee combat is functional but rough at the edges, especially early on when cannibal encounters can feel chaotic rather than skill-gated. The narrative resolution is odd enough to either delight or frustrate depending on your tolerance for ambiguity. These are genuine issues, but none of them undercut what makes The Forest worth your time: the slow escalation from peaceful woodcutter to fortified island survivor, the tension of a night raid on a well-built camp, and the nagging sense that the island is hiding something genuinely disturbing just below ground.

Riley
Riley · Scout Team

Sports & racing

Tags

singleplayermultiplayercooponline-coopcloud-savesSurvival HorrorBase BuildingCave ExplorationCannibal AIOnline Co-op 8-PlayerSanity MechanicNarrative SurvivalDay-Night CycleVR Supported

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
Intel Dual-Core 2.4 GHz
Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce 8800GT
DirectX
Version 9.0 Hard Drive: 5 GB available space
Sound Card
DirectX-compatible

Recommended

Processor
Quad Core Processor
Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
5 GB available space
Sound Card
DirectX®-compatible

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
83

Game Info

Developer
Endnight Games Ltd
Publisher
Endnight Games Ltd
Release Date
Apr 30, 2018

Game Modes

singleplayer
multiplayer
coop
online coop
Online Co-op

Languages

Audio (1)
English
Subtitles (16)
EnglishFrenchGermanCzechFinnishJapanese+10 more

Features

Cloud Saves

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Frequently asked questions about The Forest

How much does The Forest cost?

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What platforms is The Forest available on?

The Forest is available on PC.

When was The Forest released?

The Forest was released on 30 April 2018.

Who developed The Forest?

The Forest was developed by Endnight Games Ltd.

Is The Forest worth buying?

The Forest holds a Metacritic score of 83/100, making it one of the standout Action titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.