Tags / base building

"base building"

17 BuzzVerdicts across PC Games (6), Books (5), Mobile Games (6)

Supreme Commander: Forged Alliance

4.5

2007 · Real-Time Strategy · PC / Steam

Supreme Commander: Forged Alliance is the most ambitious real-time strategy game ever made, and it backs that ambition with execution. The Strategic Zoom, the escalating economy, the massive unit variety, and the sheer scale of battles create an experience no other RTS has replicated. Some interface quirks and pathfinding issues remain, and the game demands serious hardware investment for large matches. But the Forged Alliance Forever community has kept this game alive and evolving for nearly two decades, and the fact that modern RTS games still borrow its innovations tells you everything about its design quality.

Subnautica

4.5

2018 · Survival Adventure · PC / Steam

Subnautica is one of the best survival games ever made because it understands something most of its competitors don't: fear and wonder are two sides of the same coin. The alien ocean is gorgeous, terrifying, and endlessly compelling to explore, with a story that gives the whole experience a destination worth reaching. Technical issues and performance problems keep it from perfection, and they've persisted long enough that they're clearly baked in rather than fixable. But the game that exists underneath those rough edges is so inventive and so atmospheric that most players push through every bug and frame drop without hesitation. There's nothing else quite like it.

Life Reset

4.2

2017 · Shemer Kuznits · 717 pages · LitRPG

Life Reset stands as one of the best settlement-building LitRPGs available, with a protagonist whose forced transformation into a goblin creates deeply compelling survival fiction. The writing is clean, the characters feel real, and the progression from desperate scavenger to community leader provides exactly the kind of satisfying arc that the genre promises. Length may test patience in spots, but the payoff justifies the investment. If base-building scratches your particular itch, this is essential reading.

Kenshi

4.2

2018 · Open World RPG / Sandbox · PC / Steam

Kenshi is one of the most singular games on PC, a brutally uncompromising sandbox that drops you into a hostile world and expects you to figure everything out on your own. It looks dated, runs rough, and does absolutely nothing to ease you in. None of that matters once it clicks. The emergent stories that come from struggling, failing, and slowly clawing your way toward competence are unlike anything else in gaming. If you can stomach the learning curve and embrace the suffering, Kenshi will reward you with hundreds of hours of stories no designer scripted. It's not for everyone, but for the right player, it's irreplaceable.

Clash of Clans

4.0

2012 · Strategy

Clash of Clans earned its place as a mobile strategy landmark through deep base-building mechanics, a clan system that creates genuine social bonds, and over a decade of consistent updates. The grind at higher levels is real, and patience is more of a requirement than a suggestion. For players willing to settle into its rhythm, this remains one of the most rewarding strategy experiences on mobile, and it costs nothing to find out.

Command & Conquer: Red Alert 3

3.8

2008 · Real-Time Strategy · PC / Steam

Red Alert 3 is a love-it-or-leave-it proposition built entirely around excess. Its cooperative campaign design was ahead of its time, its three factions play with real distinctiveness, and the naval integration adds strategic layers that most RTS games ignore entirely. But the camp cranked past its predecessor's sweet spot, balance issues that frustrate competitive players, and an AI co-op partner that can't keep up with the mission design all leave marks. If you can embrace the absurdity and bring a friend along, there's a really fun strategy game underneath the armored bears and psychic schoolgirls.

Age of Empires IV

3.8

2021 · Real-Time Strategy · PC / Steam

Age of Empires IV brought one of PC gaming's most beloved strategy franchises back from the dead, and it did so with a solid foundation that has only improved with ongoing updates and new content. The civilizations are distinct and fun to learn, the campaigns offer a unique documentary-style presentation, and the competitive multiplayer scene has found real legs. It doesn't replace Age of Empires II for everyone, and some visual and interface choices remain polarizing, but it earned its place in the lineup. For RTS fans looking for a modern entry point into the genre, this one delivers.

Cookie Run: Kingdom

3.7

2021 · RPG

Cookie Run: Kingdom blends gacha RPG combat with kingdom building in a package that's more generous and more charming than most competitors in the genre. The power creep in recent content is pushing the game toward the pay-to-progress model it once avoided, and performance on older devices can be rough. If you enjoy collecting characters, building a base, and following a story with more personality than you'd expect, this is one of the better gacha games available, as long as the trend toward harder paywalls doesn't continue.

Shadow Sun Survival

3.7

2019 · Dave Willmarth · 511 pages · LitRPG / Post-Apocalyptic

Shadow Sun Survival is a system apocalypse LitRPG that nails the base-building and community survival elements better than most entries in the subgenre. The pacing is strong, the action is frequent, and the protagonist feels like an actual person rather than a power-fantasy insert. The familiar tropes and some convenient plot developments keep it from standing out as exceptional, but within the specific niche of apocalypse LitRPG with base-building, it's one of the more reliably entertaining options available.

Boom Beach

3.5

2014 · Real-Time Strategy

Boom Beach offers a deeply strategic combat system where troop deployment and gunboat abilities create satisfying tactical moments, backed by Supercell's usual production polish. The free-to-play timers grow punishing as you advance, Warships mode tilts heavily toward spenders, and the aging game has seen more defensive complexity than quality-of-life improvements. If you enjoy base-building strategy with a military theme and can tolerate the pace of free progression, the core loop still holds up after a decade.

Emerilia: The Trapped Mind Project

3.5

2017 · Michael Chatfield · 534 pages · LitRPG / Science Fiction Fantasy

The Trapped Mind Project flips the standard LitRPG premise on its head with a clever twist that hooks readers early. The crafting systems, world-building, and memorable dwarf companions make it a satisfying entry point for fans of the genre, though rough prose, inconsistent game mechanics, and heavy stat dumps keep it from reaching its full potential. It's a book that rewards patience and a tolerance for unpolished writing with creative ideas and an addictive sense of progression.

Limitless Lands

3.5

2018 · Dean Henegar · 244 pages · LitRPG

Limitless Lands brings a fresh concept to LitRPG by putting a 93-year-old combat veteran in command of virtual troops rather than handing a teenager a magic sword. The military strategy hook and emotional premise carry the book past its rough prose and grammatical stumbles. If you can meet it on its own terms, the commander fantasy delivers something the genre rarely attempts.

Whiteout Survival

3.5

2023 · Strategy

Whiteout Survival stands out in the crowded mobile strategy space by committing fully to its frozen setting, where every decision about resources, exploration, and development feels grounded in a survival context. The winter atmosphere is striking, the strategic choices carry real weight in the early and mid-game, and the customer support team earns rare praise in a genre known for ignoring players. Alliance politics and pay-to-win spending dominate the late game, with top alliances controlling access to events and wealthy players able to erase weeks of progress in minutes. It works best as a deliberate daily strategy session rather than a competitive pursuit.

The Land: Founding

3.3

2015 · Aleron Kong · 378 pages · Fantasy / LitRPG

The Land: Founding helped establish LitRPG as a viable Western genre, transporting its protagonist into a game-like fantasy world where stats, levels, and skill trees drive the progression. The village-building element adds variety to the power fantasy, and the breezy pace makes it an easy read. The prose is rough, the humor is juvenile, and the protagonist's constant stat screen updates interrupt the narrative flow, but for readers who enjoy the LitRPG formula at its most accessible, it delivers the numbers-going-up satisfaction the genre was built on.

Top War: Battle Game

3.0

2019 · Strategy

Top War: Battle Game merges two popular mobile genres, combining merge puzzle mechanics with base-building strategy, and the hybrid works better than it has any right to. Merging troops and buildings is a satisfying twist on the standard war strategy formula, the visual presentation is smooth, and regular events keep things moving. The pay-to-win wall is steep, developer communication is essentially nonexistent, and competitive play requires spending that makes the game feel more like an investment than entertainment. Casual players who enjoy the merge-and-build loop without chasing leaderboards will get the most out of it.

Last War: Survival

3.0

2023 · Strategy

Last War: Survival combines base building, hero collection, and alliance warfare into a post-apocalyptic package that hooks new players with its accessible early game and satisfying hero progression. The strategic depth is real, with hero composition and alliance coordination creating meaningful decisions. The pay-to-win structure becomes unavoidable at higher levels, where spending hundreds of dollars per week is the norm for competitive players, and the misleading advertising creates expectations the actual game doesn't meet. Free-to-play players can enjoy the early and mid-game, but the endgame belongs to those with deep pockets.