Compare The Outer Worlds prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Obsidian Entertainment. Published by Private Division. Released on 10/23/2020. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: RPG. Metacritic score: 82/100.

Sharp writing, a cast of genuinely weird companions, and an anti-corporate satire so pointed it might make you check your employment contract - Obsidian's sci-fi RPG punches well above its budget.

I've replayed Fallout: New Vegas enough times to know exactly where The Outer Worlds sits in the Obsidian family tree - and no, it doesn't quite topple its older sibling. What it does do is remind you why this style of first-person RPG felt so vital before the genre got swallowed by live-service nonsense. You wake from cryosleep decades late, abandoned by a corporate cabal called the Board, and a semi-unhinged scientist named Phineas Welles hands you the keys to a rattling ship and a galaxy of problems. The setup is familiar, but the execution leans hard into satirical worldbuilding, and the anti-capitalist undercurrent running through every colony, faction, and shopkeeper slogan gives the whole thing a coherent, biting edge that most RPGs would kill for. Character building is where the game earns genuine praise. You distribute points across skills ranging from long guns to intimidation to lying, with each threshold unlocking tangible bonuses - max out intimidate and enemies will sometimes flee the moment you drop one of their friends. Every other level awards a perk point, and the optional Flaws system lets you voluntarily shoulder a debuff (robophobia, anyone?) in exchange for an extra perk. It is the kind of light systemic creativity that rewards people who actually read tooltips. The companions are the other big mechanical lever: each has a unique activated ability and, more importantly, actual dialogue that reacts to the world around them. NPCs will sometimes pull your companion into separate conversations entirely, which I kept triggering deliberately just to hear the backstory. Now for the honest part. Combat on the default difficulty is soft. Tactical Time Dilation, the game's time-slowing mechanic that lets you target enemy weak spots, is genuinely fun conceptually but becomes a formality once your weapon skills are high enough. Elemental damage types, equipment mods, and consumables can all be safely ignored for a full playthrough - a real waste of the system depth on the character sheet. The Supernova difficulty mode addresses this by adding survival mechanics, permadeath for companions, and restricted saving, but it is firmly a second-playthrough proposition. The UI compounds the frustration: you can only track one quest at a time, and the inventory system makes comparing weapons more irritating than it has any right to be. Scope is the other conversation worth having. The Outer Worlds replaces a single sprawling open world with a set of smaller exploration zones - digestible, curated spaces that keep pacing tight and prevent the padding that bogs down bigger RPGs. The tradeoff is that it can feel constrained, especially to players expecting the lateral sprawl of a Bethesda title. Playthroughs clock in somewhere between 20 and 40 hours depending on how thoroughly you poke at sidequests, and the branching endings mean your faction choices - particularly the tension between siding with the Board, backing rebel factions, or steering your own anarchic course - do carry real narrative weight. The writing is consistently sharp, and the game's dark comedy tone, one where a worker's suicide is classed as a corporate crime because his body was company property, lands with the kind of uncomfortable precision good satire requires. If you are the player who squeezes every dialogue option, reads terminal logs, and wants a talking-your-way-past-everything pacifist run, this game will reward you fully. If you want deep combat loops or a world that keeps expanding past the horizon, you will hit the ceiling sooner than you'd like. With a sequel in development, now is also a reasonable time to get familiar with the Halcyon colony before the world expands. Obsidian made something compact, well-written, and sometimes brilliant here - even if it occasionally feels like it left half its ambition on the cutting room floor. Monika, Scout Team

The Outer Worlds

The Outer Worlds

Oct 23, 2020Obsidian EntertainmentPrivate Division
GamerScout Says

Sharp writing, a cast of genuinely weird companions, and an anti-corporate satire so pointed it might make you check your employment contract - Obsidian's sci-fi RPG punches well above its budget.

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About The Outer Worlds

I've replayed Fallout: New Vegas enough times to know exactly where The Outer Worlds sits in the Obsidian family tree - and no, it doesn't quite topple its older sibling. What it does do is remind you why this style of first-person RPG felt so vital before the genre got swallowed by live-service nonsense. You wake from cryosleep decades late, abandoned by a corporate cabal called the Board, and a semi-unhinged scientist named Phineas Welles hands you the keys to a rattling ship and a galaxy of problems. The setup is familiar, but the execution leans hard into satirical worldbuilding, and the anti-capitalist undercurrent running through every colony, faction, and shopkeeper slogan gives the whole thing a coherent, biting edge that most RPGs would kill for. Character building is where the game earns genuine praise. You distribute points across skills ranging from long guns to intimidation to lying, with each threshold unlocking tangible bonuses - max out intimidate and enemies will sometimes flee the moment you drop one of their friends. Every other level awards a perk point, and the optional Flaws system lets you voluntarily shoulder a debuff (robophobia, anyone?) in exchange for an extra perk. It is the kind of light systemic creativity that rewards people who actually read tooltips. The companions are the other big mechanical lever: each has a unique activated ability and, more importantly, actual dialogue that reacts to the world around them. NPCs will sometimes pull your companion into separate conversations entirely, which I kept triggering deliberately just to hear the backstory. Now for the honest part. Combat on the default difficulty is soft. Tactical Time Dilation, the game's time-slowing mechanic that lets you target enemy weak spots, is genuinely fun conceptually but becomes a formality once your weapon skills are high enough. Elemental damage types, equipment mods, and consumables can all be safely ignored for a full playthrough - a real waste of the system depth on the character sheet. The Supernova difficulty mode addresses this by adding survival mechanics, permadeath for companions, and restricted saving, but it is firmly a second-playthrough proposition. The UI compounds the frustration: you can only track one quest at a time, and the inventory system makes comparing weapons more irritating than it has any right to be. Scope is the other conversation worth having. The Outer Worlds replaces a single sprawling open world with a set of smaller exploration zones - digestible, curated spaces that keep pacing tight and prevent the padding that bogs down bigger RPGs. The tradeoff is that it can feel constrained, especially to players expecting the lateral sprawl of a Bethesda title. Playthroughs clock in somewhere between 20 and 40 hours depending on how thoroughly you poke at sidequests, and the branching endings mean your faction choices - particularly the tension between siding with the Board, backing rebel factions, or steering your own anarchic course - do carry real narrative weight. The writing is consistently sharp, and the game's dark comedy tone, one where a worker's suicide is classed as a corporate crime because his body was company property, lands with the kind of uncomfortable precision good satire requires. If you are the player who squeezes every dialogue option, reads terminal logs, and wants a talking-your-way-past-everything pacifist run, this game will reward you fully. If you want deep combat loops or a world that keeps expanding past the horizon, you will hit the ceiling sooner than you'd like. With a sequel in development, now is also a reasonable time to get familiar with the Halcyon colony before the world expands. Obsidian made something compact, well-written, and sometimes brilliant here - even if it occasionally feels like it left half its ambition on the cutting room floor.

Monika
Monika · Scout Team

RPGs

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savesAnti-Corporate SatireCompanion SystemBranching DialogueTactical Time DilationSkill-Check BuildsFlaw MechanicSupernova DifficultySpace WesternFirst-Person RPG

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
Intel Core i7-6700 or AMD Ryzen 5 1600
Memory
12 GB RAM
Graphics
GeForce GTX 1060 6 GB or Radeon RX 590
Storage
62 GB available space

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 64bit
Processor
Intel Core i7-7700K or Ryzen 5 1600
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
GeForce GTX 1060 6GB or Radeon RX 470
Storage
40 GB avai…

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
82

Game Info

Developer
Obsidian Entertainment
Publisher
Private Division
Release Date
Oct 23, 2020
Age Rating
PEGI 18

Game Modes

singleplayer

Languages

Audio (1)
English
Subtitles (11)
EnglishFrenchItalianGermanSpanish - SpainJapanese+5 more

Features

AchievementsController SupportCloud Saves

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Frequently asked questions about The Outer Worlds

How much does The Outer Worlds cost?

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What platforms is The Outer Worlds available on?

The Outer Worlds is available on PC, Xbox.

When was The Outer Worlds released?

The Outer Worlds was released on 23 October 2020.

Who developed The Outer Worlds?

The Outer Worlds was developed by Obsidian Entertainment and published by Private Division.

Is The Outer Worlds worth buying?

The Outer Worlds holds a Metacritic score of 82/100, making it one of the standout RPG titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.