Compare Valheim prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Iron Gate AB. Published by Coffee Stain Publishing. Released on 2/2/2021. Available on PC, Mac, Linux, Xbox. Genres: Action, Adventure, Indie, RPG, Early Access.

Ninety-four percent of half a million Steam reviews don't lie: this Norse purgatory will eat your evenings, your weekends, and your sense of time, one biome at a time.

I first dropped into Valheim expecting a janky Early Access survival sandbox and walked out about 200 hours later having built a longhouse with load-bearing internal columns, sailed through a midnight storm to fight the Elder, and seriously considered whether my base layout was optimized for the inevitable troll raid. The low-poly, almost dreamlike visual style is not a flaw you tolerate - it contributes to an atmosphere that bigger-budget survival games simply cannot replicate. The fog rolls, the distant forests hiss, and the procedurally generated world feels genuinely wild in a way that scripted open worlds rarely do. The core loop is elegantly brutal. You start with nothing but sticks and stones in the Meadows, and every new biome - Black Forest, Swamp, Mountains, Plains, Mistlands, Ashlands - gates your progression behind a summoned boss. Kill that boss, unlock the next tier of crafting materials, build better gear, sail further out, and repeat. The boss-gated progression model sounds restrictive on paper but it works because each biome is a coherent ecosystem with its own weather, enemy types, and survival demands. Arriving in the Swamp with bronze armor feels appropriately terrifying; you come prepared or you come back in a coffin. Combat is physics-based and genuinely satisfying - stamina management, timed blocks, dodges, and weapon choice all matter. Bows, axes, swords, spears, clubs, knives, and late-game magic staves each play differently enough that build variety stays interesting well past the early hours. The Ashlands update raised the ceiling dramatically, adding over 30 new weapons, Flametal armor with heat resistance mechanics, tameable Asksvin mounts, Charred Fortress sieges, and the boss Fader. The difficulty curve steepens sharply from Mistlands onward, though, and solo players will feel that pressure more than co-op groups. Building deserves a full paragraph because it is almost a second game. The snap-and-build system with structural integrity modelling means that a roof that looks cool but has no support will collapse, which I discovered expensively. Subsequent major updates have introduced Black Marble and Grausten stone sets, allowing genuinely fortress-scale construction that wood-and-thatch bases cannot match. People have built replicas of historical structures in this engine. The base-building community is quietly enormous and very good at making you feel inadequate. The criticisms are real. Inventory management is a persistent frustration - the grid is too small for the number of crafting materials the game demands, and the community has loudly and repeatedly asked for equipment slots. Updates arrive slowly; Iron Gate is a small studio and the gap between major biome drops has tested patience. Some quality-of-life friction, like planting crops one at a time and early sailing that fights the wind on principle, has been partially addressed but never fully resolved. The game remains in Early Access with the Deep North biome and an Ocean biome still on the roadmap, so if paying full price for an unfinished game is a philosophical dealbreaker for you, that matters. For everyone else, what is already here represents a staggeringly complete experience for the price. Valheim is at its best with two to four friends on a shared server, dividing labor, building interconnected bases, and co-ordinating boss summons. It is still very good solo, particularly for players who enjoy methodical preparation and find satisfaction in the slow grind from flint knife to Flametal greatsword. The writing is minimal and the lore is conveyed mostly through environment and item descriptions, so anyone looking for Disco Elysium levels of narrative payoff will need to adjust expectations. What you get instead is a sense of mythological weight, the feeling that Odin is watching your fumbling efforts with something between amusement and approval. Monika, Scout Team

Valheim

Valheim

Feb 2, 2021Iron Gate ABCoffee Stain Publishing
GamerScout Says

Ninety-four percent of half a million Steam reviews don't lie: this Norse purgatory will eat your evenings, your weekends, and your sense of time, one biome at a time.

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Price History

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About Valheim

I first dropped into Valheim expecting a janky Early Access survival sandbox and walked out about 200 hours later having built a longhouse with load-bearing internal columns, sailed through a midnight storm to fight the Elder, and seriously considered whether my base layout was optimized for the inevitable troll raid. The low-poly, almost dreamlike visual style is not a flaw you tolerate - it contributes to an atmosphere that bigger-budget survival games simply cannot replicate. The fog rolls, the distant forests hiss, and the procedurally generated world feels genuinely wild in a way that scripted open worlds rarely do. The core loop is elegantly brutal. You start with nothing but sticks and stones in the Meadows, and every new biome - Black Forest, Swamp, Mountains, Plains, Mistlands, Ashlands - gates your progression behind a summoned boss. Kill that boss, unlock the next tier of crafting materials, build better gear, sail further out, and repeat. The boss-gated progression model sounds restrictive on paper but it works because each biome is a coherent ecosystem with its own weather, enemy types, and survival demands. Arriving in the Swamp with bronze armor feels appropriately terrifying; you come prepared or you come back in a coffin. Combat is physics-based and genuinely satisfying - stamina management, timed blocks, dodges, and weapon choice all matter. Bows, axes, swords, spears, clubs, knives, and late-game magic staves each play differently enough that build variety stays interesting well past the early hours. The Ashlands update raised the ceiling dramatically, adding over 30 new weapons, Flametal armor with heat resistance mechanics, tameable Asksvin mounts, Charred Fortress sieges, and the boss Fader. The difficulty curve steepens sharply from Mistlands onward, though, and solo players will feel that pressure more than co-op groups. Building deserves a full paragraph because it is almost a second game. The snap-and-build system with structural integrity modelling means that a roof that looks cool but has no support will collapse, which I discovered expensively. Subsequent major updates have introduced Black Marble and Grausten stone sets, allowing genuinely fortress-scale construction that wood-and-thatch bases cannot match. People have built replicas of historical structures in this engine. The base-building community is quietly enormous and very good at making you feel inadequate. The criticisms are real. Inventory management is a persistent frustration - the grid is too small for the number of crafting materials the game demands, and the community has loudly and repeatedly asked for equipment slots. Updates arrive slowly; Iron Gate is a small studio and the gap between major biome drops has tested patience. Some quality-of-life friction, like planting crops one at a time and early sailing that fights the wind on principle, has been partially addressed but never fully resolved. The game remains in Early Access with the Deep North biome and an Ocean biome still on the roadmap, so if paying full price for an unfinished game is a philosophical dealbreaker for you, that matters. For everyone else, what is already here represents a staggeringly complete experience for the price. Valheim is at its best with two to four friends on a shared server, dividing labor, building interconnected bases, and co-ordinating boss summons. It is still very good solo, particularly for players who enjoy methodical preparation and find satisfaction in the slow grind from flint knife to Flametal greatsword. The writing is minimal and the lore is conveyed mostly through environment and item descriptions, so anyone looking for Disco Elysium levels of narrative payoff will need to adjust expectations. What you get instead is a sense of mythological weight, the feeling that Odin is watching your fumbling efforts with something between amusement and approval.

Monika
Monika · Scout Team

RPGs

Tags

singleplayermultiplayercooponline-coopcontroller-supportcloud-savessteamCo-op SurvivalBoss-Gated ProgressionBase BuildingPhysics-Based CombatProcedural WorldSkill-Based CraftingNorse MythologyOpen World SurvivalStructural Integrity BuildingBiome ProgressionStamina-Based CombatMagic WeaponsTaming & MountsMythology-Driven Lore

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
2.6 GHz Quad Core or similar
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
GeForce GTX 950 or Radeon HD 7970
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
1 GB available…

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 or later
Processor
i5 3GHz or Ryzen 5 3GHz
Memory
16 GB RAM
Graphics
GeForce GTX 1060 or Radeon RX 580
DirectX
Version 11
Network
B…

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
94%(533,735)

Game Info

Developer
Iron Gate AB
Publisher
Coffee Stain Publishing
Release Date
Feb 2, 2021

Game Modes

singleplayer
multiplayer
coop
online coop
Online Co-op

Languages

Subtitles (14)
EnglishFrenchGermanSpanish - SpainRussianSimplified Chinese+8 more

Features

Controller SupportCloud Saves

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Frequently asked questions about Valheim

How much does Valheim cost?

Valheim 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 Valheim available on?

Valheim is available on PC, Mac, Linux, Xbox.

When was Valheim released?

Valheim was released on 2 February 2021.

Who developed Valheim?

Valheim was developed by Iron Gate AB and published by Coffee Stain Publishing.