I bounced off Frostpunk the first time I tried it. The second attempt — about three months later, after a long flight, on a recommendation from a friend — was when the design clicked. This is a review of the second attempt.
Going into Frostpunk, I expected a sequel that played it safe. What I got was a flawed game I couldn't put down. That gap is what this review will spend the next thousand words pulling apart.
Gameplay
Combat in Frostpunk rewards reading more than reflexes. 11 bit studios clearly built around the idea that you should always have time to think — but the consequences for thinking wrong are real. The result is the rare action game that respects deliberate play.
Mechanically, Frostpunk sits at an interesting intersection. The skill-into-progress loop pulls from platformer fundamentals, but the way 11 bit studios layers faction reputation on top changes how you approach each session. After a few hours you start to recognize patterns — not just in the game, but in your own decisions.

Story & Setting
Narratively, Frostpunk works because 11 bit studios keeps the stakes personal even when the scope is enormous. The headline plot involves an inter-dimensional crisis, but the moments that land are smaller — a conversation in a tavern, a letter you find in a desk drawer, a side character whose name you remember three weeks after the credits.
Where Frostpunk stumbles narratively is in the middle. The opening is sharp, the ending is satisfying, and the long middle stretch — somewhere between hours 8 and 23 — has pacing problems that 11 bit studios hasn't fully solved. Patches have helped. They haven't fixed.
Frostpunk arrives quietly, and stays quietly, and you'll think about it for weeks.
Render Beacon
Visuals & Performance
If there's a visual complaint, it's that some interface elements need a second pass. Inventory screens, especially, feel like they were finalized later than the rest of the art direction. A patch could close that gap entirely.

Verdict
We score Frostpunk a 8/10. That's high for the genre, but the strengths are unambiguous and the weaknesses are addressable through patches. Worth the time of anyone with even a passing interest.
Frostpunk is the kind of game that rewards patience. The first three hours don't sell it. The thirtieth hour does. If you have the time, give it. If you don't, the verdict is honest: it's not a 'short session' game.
Verdict
| Category | Score |
|---|---|
| Gameplay | 7/10 |
| Story | 7/10 |
| Visuals | 5/10 |
| Replayability | 4/10 |
Frequently asked questions
How long does it take to finish Frostpunk?
Main story runs around 12-15 hours depending on how thoroughly you explore. Completionists can spend 2-3× that.
Is Frostpunk good for newcomers to Survival City-builder?
It depends. The systems are deep but the tutorial does a fair job. Veterans of Survival City-builder will feel at home faster.
Which platform should I play Frostpunk on?
PC version offers the highest fidelity if your rig can handle it. Console versions are polished out of the box.
Was Frostpunk worth the launch-day price?
Released in 2018, and as of writing it holds up. Wait for a sale if you're price-sensitive — major discounts arrive within 6 months.
Are there DLCs or expansions worth picking up?
Wait for the Game of the Year edition — it bundles everything at a fair discount.
What did 11 bit studios get right (and what could be better)?
11 bit studios nailed the moment-to-moment loop and the world-building. Pacing in the mid-game and inventory UX have room for improvement.
Comments
Comments are moderated. Be civil — disagreement is fine, abuse isn't.

The economy is broken in the late game, surprised this wasn't mentioned.
Wish more outlets pushed back on the difficulty spike around hour 10.
Multiplayer mode adds 30+ hours of replay value. Underrated section.
Best take I've read on this one. The Survival City-builder space needs more critical depth.