Compare V Rising prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Stunlock Studios. Published by Stunlock Studios. Released on 5/8/2024. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Massively Multiplayer.

Spend one night in Vardoran and you will understand why 90% of 134k Steam reviewers refused to log off. Vampire survival with real build depth and full-loot PvP that bites back.

I came into V Rising expecting a gothic Valheim clone and left two weeks later with a spreadsheet of blood type buffs and a castle that would make Dracula mildly jealous. This is a top-down action survival game where castle building and boss hunting are locked in a tight feedback loop: you raid the world for resources, you upgrade your keep, your upgraded keep unlocks the next V Blood boss, that boss drops new recipes and spells, and the cycle accelerates satisfyingly all the way to the endgame. It sounds simple on paper. It is not simple in practice. The combat is where the game earns serious respect. Stunlock built an ARPG ability system on top of the survival scaffolding, and the two actually talk to each other. You slot two basic spells, a travel spell, and an ultimate, then pick a weapon type that defines your melee kit. Swords give you Shockwave and Whirlwind for aggressive repositioning, Maces bring stuns via Crushing Blow for locking down targets, Slashers lean into evasive burst with Shadow Dash and Elusive Strike, and Spears reward precise single-target play with Harpoon and Aerial Strike. Weapons are broadly balanced against each other rather than there being a single dominant option, which keeps the meta readable. Blood type adds another layer: Scholar blood cuts cooldowns for a spell-spam kite playstyle, while Warrior blood rewards aggressive melee. The Frost, Chaos, and Bruiser archetypes all have real teeth in open-world PvP, and theorycrafting your build before a PvP server raid feels genuinely tactical rather than just gear-checking the other player. Full-loot PvP servers are the sharpest edge here. You lose your equipped gear on death, and castle raiding is a legitimate option for opponents. If that sounds exhausting, the server config system is unusually generous: resource rates, day length, sun damage, and raid windows are all tunable, and private co-op servers effectively remove the real-world timer pressure that makes large public clans dominant. Solo players can run a Story Mode option that gates the world but removes PvP friction entirely. The 1.0 launch also added two new difficulty settings - Relaxed and Brutal - for players who want either a low-stakes crafting experience or a genuinely punishing boss gauntlet. The 1.1 Invaders of Oakveil update pushed the legendary weapon system further, with unique passive effects and synergies with new armor sets and elixirs, giving endgame PvP servers a meaningful meta to chew on. Weaknesses are real. Solo players who dislike resource loops will hit a wall around mid-game where the world starts feeling large relative to your travel speed before you unlock faster movement forms. The map is deceptively big, and early traversal is slow enough to feel punishing if you venture out at dawn without planning your route back to shelter. Some players also flag that early boss movesets can feel repetitive before the roster opens up. These are not dealbreakers but they are worth flagging if you are primarily a solo player who hates backtracking. For anyone who plays with even one other person, though, the co-op loop is close to frictionless. The castle-building system snaps together cleanly, the ARPG combat rewards mechanical improvement, and the PvP layer gives the whole thing a reason to keep running after the story content is done. It shipped out of Early Access in a state that most games do not hit at version 1.0, and post-launch updates have only added depth. If you tolerate survival game structure and want something with real build variety underneath it, this is the one. Fred, Scout Team

V Rising

V Rising

May 8, 2024Stunlock Studios
GamerScout Says

Spend one night in Vardoran and you will understand why 90% of 134k Steam reviewers refused to log off. Vampire survival with real build depth and full-loot PvP that bites back.

PC
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Historical low: €4.99

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Price History

Historical low
€4.9926 Jun 2026
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€4.88€5.25€5.61€5.985 Jun12 Jun19 Jun25 Jun2 Jul
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About V Rising

I came into V Rising expecting a gothic Valheim clone and left two weeks later with a spreadsheet of blood type buffs and a castle that would make Dracula mildly jealous. This is a top-down action survival game where castle building and boss hunting are locked in a tight feedback loop: you raid the world for resources, you upgrade your keep, your upgraded keep unlocks the next V Blood boss, that boss drops new recipes and spells, and the cycle accelerates satisfyingly all the way to the endgame. It sounds simple on paper. It is not simple in practice. The combat is where the game earns serious respect. Stunlock built an ARPG ability system on top of the survival scaffolding, and the two actually talk to each other. You slot two basic spells, a travel spell, and an ultimate, then pick a weapon type that defines your melee kit. Swords give you Shockwave and Whirlwind for aggressive repositioning, Maces bring stuns via Crushing Blow for locking down targets, Slashers lean into evasive burst with Shadow Dash and Elusive Strike, and Spears reward precise single-target play with Harpoon and Aerial Strike. Weapons are broadly balanced against each other rather than there being a single dominant option, which keeps the meta readable. Blood type adds another layer: Scholar blood cuts cooldowns for a spell-spam kite playstyle, while Warrior blood rewards aggressive melee. The Frost, Chaos, and Bruiser archetypes all have real teeth in open-world PvP, and theorycrafting your build before a PvP server raid feels genuinely tactical rather than just gear-checking the other player. Full-loot PvP servers are the sharpest edge here. You lose your equipped gear on death, and castle raiding is a legitimate option for opponents. If that sounds exhausting, the server config system is unusually generous: resource rates, day length, sun damage, and raid windows are all tunable, and private co-op servers effectively remove the real-world timer pressure that makes large public clans dominant. Solo players can run a Story Mode option that gates the world but removes PvP friction entirely. The 1.0 launch also added two new difficulty settings - Relaxed and Brutal - for players who want either a low-stakes crafting experience or a genuinely punishing boss gauntlet. The 1.1 Invaders of Oakveil update pushed the legendary weapon system further, with unique passive effects and synergies with new armor sets and elixirs, giving endgame PvP servers a meaningful meta to chew on. Weaknesses are real. Solo players who dislike resource loops will hit a wall around mid-game where the world starts feeling large relative to your travel speed before you unlock faster movement forms. The map is deceptively big, and early traversal is slow enough to feel punishing if you venture out at dawn without planning your route back to shelter. Some players also flag that early boss movesets can feel repetitive before the roster opens up. These are not dealbreakers but they are worth flagging if you are primarily a solo player who hates backtracking. For anyone who plays with even one other person, though, the co-op loop is close to frictionless. The castle-building system snaps together cleanly, the ARPG combat rewards mechanical improvement, and the PvP layer gives the whole thing a reason to keep running after the story content is done. It shipped out of Early Access in a state that most games do not hit at version 1.0, and post-launch updates have only added depth. If you tolerate survival game structure and want something with real build variety underneath it, this is the one.

Fred
Fred · Scout Team

Shooters

Tags

singleplayermultiplayercooponline-coopachievementscloud-savessteamVampireCastle BuildingBoss RushCo-op SurvivalOpen-World PvPAbility BuildsFull-Loot PvPIsometricStory ModeBlood Type SystemServer CustomizationSpell Combo BuildsGothic SurvivalBrutal ModeLegendary WeaponsCastle RaidingIsometric ARPG

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 64 bit
Processor
Intel® Core™ i5
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 770 or equivalent
DirectX
Version 11
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
4 GB available space Additional Notes…

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 64 bit
Processor
Intel Core i5-11600K, 3.9 GHz or AMD Ryzen 5 5600X, 3.7 GHz
Memory
12 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1070, 8 GB or…

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
89%(133,970)

Game Info

Developer
Stunlock Studios
Publisher
Stunlock Studios
Release Date
May 8, 2024

Game Modes

singleplayer
multiplayer
coop
online coop
Online Co-op

Languages

Audio (1)
English
Subtitles (16)
EnglishFrenchGermanSpanish - SpainPortuguese - BrazilSimplified Chinese+10 more

Features

AchievementsCloud Saves

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Frequently asked questions about V Rising

How much does V Rising cost?

V Rising 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 V Rising available on?

V Rising is available on PC.

When was V Rising released?

V Rising was released on 8 May 2024.

Who developed V Rising?

V Rising was developed by Stunlock Studios.