Compare The Warrior War prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Softwaves. Published by SA Industry. Released on 5/8/2021. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Casual, Indie, Strategy.

Rated Mostly Negative on Steam with a 37% approval rate, this sub-dollar war shooter tells you everything you need to know before clicking add to cart.

I'll be straight with you: I pulled up the Steam review page for The Warrior War expecting the thin-but-honest feedback you sometimes get from micro-budget indie releases, and what I found was a Mostly Negative rating sitting at 37% positive across 29 total reviews. For a strategy-and-sim guy who tracks reception data like a spreadsheet, that number is a hard stop before the first screenshot even loads. The premise follows Jacob, a military soldier cut off from communications after a ground mine ambush, left with four soldiers in hostile territory where enemies blend in as civilians. On paper, that tension between threat identification and positioning sounds like it has a kernel of genuine tactical appeal. In practice, the game is a straightforward third-person shooting experience with selectable difficulty levels and an in-game chat function that serves little purpose in a singleplayer context. There are no classes, no loadout customisation, no resource loops, and no strategic layer underneath the shooting. The "strategy" tag on the Steam page is doing a lot of heavy lifting for what amounts to a corridor-shooter skeleton. From a depth-of-decision-making standpoint, which is the metric I care about most, The Warrior War offers almost nothing to hold onto. The difficulty slider is the closest thing to a systems layer you will find here. There is no mod ecosystem, no post-launch content updates visible in the community hub, and the community hub itself is essentially empty, with the developer's own posts about unrelated games filling the void where player discussion should be. Concurrent player counts hover at essentially zero. Those are not signs of a sleeper hit waiting to be discovered; they are signs of a release that shipped and stopped. The system requirements are genuinely minimal (2 GB RAM, 1 GB VRAM, DirectX 11, 8 GB storage), and the game supports both English and Brazilian Portuguese, which suggests Softwaves is a small Brazilian studio putting out quick commercial releases. There is nothing wrong with that as a business model, but it means The Warrior War was never designed to compete with anything in the action or strategy space in a meaningful way. Newcomers looking for a first war game will find nothing here to teach them genre fundamentals. Veterans will find nothing to push them. Who is this actually for? Genuinely, it is a card in an SA Industry bundle pickup, nothing more. If you are chasing Steam achievements or filling out a catalogue, the entry cost is negligible. If you want even thirty minutes of satisfying tactical shooting, put that same time into looking elsewhere. Diego, Scout Team

The Warrior War
ActionCasualIndieStrategy

The Warrior War

May 8, 2021SoftwavesSA Industry
GamerScout Says

Rated Mostly Negative on Steam with a 37% approval rate, this sub-dollar war shooter tells you everything you need to know before clicking add to cart.

PC
Best Price Available
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Historical low: $0.39

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Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About The Warrior War

I'll be straight with you: I pulled up the Steam review page for The Warrior War expecting the thin-but-honest feedback you sometimes get from micro-budget indie releases, and what I found was a Mostly Negative rating sitting at 37% positive across 29 total reviews. For a strategy-and-sim guy who tracks reception data like a spreadsheet, that number is a hard stop before the first screenshot even loads. The premise follows Jacob, a military soldier cut off from communications after a ground mine ambush, left with four soldiers in hostile territory where enemies blend in as civilians. On paper, that tension between threat identification and positioning sounds like it has a kernel of genuine tactical appeal. In practice, the game is a straightforward third-person shooting experience with selectable difficulty levels and an in-game chat function that serves little purpose in a singleplayer context. There are no classes, no loadout customisation, no resource loops, and no strategic layer underneath the shooting. The "strategy" tag on the Steam page is doing a lot of heavy lifting for what amounts to a corridor-shooter skeleton. From a depth-of-decision-making standpoint, which is the metric I care about most, The Warrior War offers almost nothing to hold onto. The difficulty slider is the closest thing to a systems layer you will find here. There is no mod ecosystem, no post-launch content updates visible in the community hub, and the community hub itself is essentially empty, with the developer's own posts about unrelated games filling the void where player discussion should be. Concurrent player counts hover at essentially zero. Those are not signs of a sleeper hit waiting to be discovered; they are signs of a release that shipped and stopped. The system requirements are genuinely minimal (2 GB RAM, 1 GB VRAM, DirectX 11, 8 GB storage), and the game supports both English and Brazilian Portuguese, which suggests Softwaves is a small Brazilian studio putting out quick commercial releases. There is nothing wrong with that as a business model, but it means The Warrior War was never designed to compete with anything in the action or strategy space in a meaningful way. Newcomers looking for a first war game will find nothing here to teach them genre fundamentals. Veterans will find nothing to push them. Who is this actually for? Genuinely, it is a card in an SA Industry bundle pickup, nothing more. If you are chasing Steam achievements or filling out a catalogue, the entry cost is negligible. If you want even thirty minutes of satisfying tactical shooting, put that same time into looking elsewhere. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertier:sub-5Budget ShooterLow ReplayabilityMinimal SystemsAchievement HuntingBundle Filler

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
OS: Windows Vista, Windows 7 or Windows 8;
Memory
2 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
8 MB available space
Graphics
Graphics: Graphics card that supports DirectX11 and with at least 1 GB of VRam;
Processor
Processor: CPU with 2 cores of 2,4 Ghz;

Recommended

OS
OS: Windows Vista, Windows 7 or Windows 8;
Memory
2 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
8 MB available space
Graphics
Graphics: Graphics card with DirectX11 support and with at least 1 GB of RAM (nVidia GTX560 or higher, or AMD HD5870 or higher);
Processor
Processor: CPU with 4 cores of 2,4 Ghz;

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
Softwaves
Publisher
SA Industry
Release Date
May 8, 2021

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Price History

2026-06-100.39(lowest)
2026-06-090.39(lowest)

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Frequently asked questions about The Warrior War

How much does The Warrior War cost?

The Warrior War 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.

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What platforms is The Warrior War available on?

The Warrior War is available on PC.

When was The Warrior War released?

The Warrior War was released on 8 May 2021.

Who developed The Warrior War?

The Warrior War was developed by Softwaves and published by SA Industry.