Compare Tower of Fate prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Clockwork Wolf. Published by Clockwork Wolf. Released on 8/13/2019. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Strategy, Indie, Horror, Survival.

Rage-puzzle horror with a sadistic spirit narrator and a tower that cheats on purpose. Worth a look if you have patience for psychological mind games and zero tolerance for hand-holding.

My first impression of Tower of Fate was that someone crossed a psychological horror walking-sim with a deliberately cruel puzzle-gauntlet, then handed the keys to a spirit called Fate who has absolutely no interest in being fair to you. That framing is not accidental. The developer pins a disclaimer right at the top of the Steam community hub: this is a rage game. Fate will not play nice. If you walked in expecting a contemplative atmospheric experience, you are in the wrong tower. The setup drops you in a void realm caught between Hell and Earth. You are dead, more or less, and a spirit named Fate informs you that the only path to redemption is climbing to the very top of the tower above you. The tone sits somewhere between creepy and darkly comedic, with branching story dialogue that gives Fate real character. IGDB comparisons to The Stanley Parable are not unfair. There is a similar sense of a narrator who knows you are playing and enjoys watching you fail. That personality carries the whole thing, because without it the underlying mechanics would feel pretty sparse. The climb itself escalates from basic timing events through increasingly layered mind games and trickery. Puzzles grow more complex the higher you go, hidden secrets and areas reward thorough players, and the full 3D sound design adds genuine atmosphere to what could have been a cheap haunted-house setup. The game supports full controller input, which helps with the tighter timing sections. There is no hand-holding and, critically, the Steam community has surfaced debates about missing or sparse save points, so expect to repeat sections when you die. That is either a feature or a dealbreaker depending on your patience threshold. Where Tower of Fate struggles is visibility. There are virtually no published critic reviews, no Metacritic score, and the owner count on Steam is in the low thousands. That obscurity cuts both ways: the developer, a solo creator under the Clockwork Wolf label, does appear to monitor the bug report thread actively, and the community is small but engaged. The bug thread pinned to the forums has seen updates as recently as 2024, which is a reasonable sign of ongoing care. Even so, there is a real risk of hitting an unpatched rough edge, especially in the water crystal sequence that has tripped up multiple players in the community forums. Who is this for: horror fans who want their puzzles to talk back at them, players who liked the adversarial narrator energy in Parable-style games, and anyone who treats "guaranteed pain and suffering" on a feature list as a selling point rather than a warning. If you want a polished, well-reviewed indie with a safety net, Tower of Fate is probably not your stop. But if you enjoy a small, weird, atmospheric experience with genuine menace and a developer who is still around, there is something here worth the climb. Alex, Scout Team

Tower of Fate

Tower of Fate

Aug 13, 2019Clockwork Wolf
GamerScout Says

Rage-puzzle horror with a sadistic spirit narrator and a tower that cheats on purpose. Worth a look if you have patience for psychological mind games and zero tolerance for hand-holding.

PC
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €20.12

GamerScout Verdict

Best for horror fans who want a sadistic narrator and escalating mind-game puzzles, and who won't rage-quit the first time Fate cheats them.

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About Tower of Fate

My first impression of Tower of Fate was that someone crossed a psychological horror walking-sim with a deliberately cruel puzzle-gauntlet, then handed the keys to a spirit called Fate who has absolutely no interest in being fair to you. That framing is not accidental. The developer pins a disclaimer right at the top of the Steam community hub: this is a rage game. Fate will not play nice. If you walked in expecting a contemplative atmospheric experience, you are in the wrong tower. The setup drops you in a void realm caught between Hell and Earth. You are dead, more or less, and a spirit named Fate informs you that the only path to redemption is climbing to the very top of the tower above you. The tone sits somewhere between creepy and darkly comedic, with branching story dialogue that gives Fate real character. IGDB comparisons to The Stanley Parable are not unfair. There is a similar sense of a narrator who knows you are playing and enjoys watching you fail. That personality carries the whole thing, because without it the underlying mechanics would feel pretty sparse. The climb itself escalates from basic timing events through increasingly layered mind games and trickery. Puzzles grow more complex the higher you go, hidden secrets and areas reward thorough players, and the full 3D sound design adds genuine atmosphere to what could have been a cheap haunted-house setup. The game supports full controller input, which helps with the tighter timing sections. There is no hand-holding and, critically, the Steam community has surfaced debates about missing or sparse save points, so expect to repeat sections when you die. That is either a feature or a dealbreaker depending on your patience threshold. Where Tower of Fate struggles is visibility. There are virtually no published critic reviews, no Metacritic score, and the owner count on Steam is in the low thousands. That obscurity cuts both ways: the developer, a solo creator under the Clockwork Wolf label, does appear to monitor the bug report thread actively, and the community is small but engaged. The bug thread pinned to the forums has seen updates as recently as 2024, which is a reasonable sign of ongoing care. Even so, there is a real risk of hitting an unpatched rough edge, especially in the water crystal sequence that has tripped up multiple players in the community forums. Who is this for: horror fans who want their puzzles to talk back at them, players who liked the adversarial narrator energy in Parable-style games, and anyone who treats "guaranteed pain and suffering" on a feature list as a selling point rather than a warning. If you want a polished, well-reviewed indie with a safety net, Tower of Fate is probably not your stop. But if you enjoy a small, weird, atmospheric experience with genuine menace and a developer who is still around, there is something here worth the climb.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

tier:no-steam-match:aaa-pricedenriched-from-kinguinRage GamePsychological HorrorPuzzle PlatformerAtmospheric NarratorSingle-playerTiming ChallengesHidden SecretsController SupportDark ComedySolo Dev

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
Intel i3 2.5ghz or equivalent
Memory
6 GB RAM
Graphics
2GB VRAM (Dedicated)
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
10 GB available space

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Game Info

Developer
Clockwork Wolf
Publisher
Clockwork Wolf
Release Date
Aug 13, 2019

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Frequently asked questions about Tower of Fate

How much does Tower of Fate cost?

Tower of Fate pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

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What platforms is Tower of Fate available on?

Tower of Fate is available on PC.

When was Tower of Fate released?

Tower of Fate was released on 13 August 2019.

Who developed Tower of Fate?

Tower of Fate was developed by Clockwork Wolf.