The 30 best survival games on PC
Promise me that you will never die

There’s never been a better time to get into survival games on PC, as the recent revival of the genre means Steam is now awash in some truly great games, both in early access and in full release. There are more arriving every year, too, which is why we’ve done the hard work for you and ranked the very best survival games to dive into today. Fair warning - there are some early access games on this list, which mean they might be a little janky early on. Give them the time they deserve, though, and you’ll find they often blossom into some truly great games over subsequent updates. We’ve only included the very best and most complete-feeling survival games on this list, though, so you can rest assured that every game here will leave you hungry for more. It’s by no means exhaustive, but it should give you a nice selection of wolf-taming, base-building, carrot-picking action to choose from.
It’s also worth keeping in mind the slew of upcoming survival games due out this year, as there’s a fair few with great potential. First up is Subnautica 2 , the much-awaited sequel to what we consider the best surival game out there at the moment (light spoiler for the rest of the article). Others to watch are Dune Awakening, Light No Fire , and Outward 2.

Best survival games
It’s worth noting that our definition of “survival” isn’t laser-focused on only those of the first-person variety, or those that have hunger bars. You’ll find all sorts on this list, many of which have barely anything in common with each other, beyond the fact that you’ve got to y’know, survive.
- State Of Decay 2
- Ark: Survival Evolved
- The Long Dark
- Project Zomboid
- Neo Scavenger
- V Rising
- Among Trees
- UnReal World
- Cataclysm: Dark Days Ahead
- Sons Of The Forest
- Raft
- Pathologic
- 7 Days To Die
- This War Of Mine
- Astroneer
- Starbound
- Darkwood
- Grounded
- Oxygen Not Included
- Don’t Starve
- Rust
- No Man’s Sky
- Escape From Tarkov
- Kenshi
- Minecraft
- Frostpunk
- Valheim
- Terraria
- RimWorld
- Subnautica
30. State Of Decay 2

In Brendy’s State Of Decay 2 review , he reckons it’s an ever-expanding to-do list, which is absolutely what it is. But hey, if you’re fine with that, then the game can be a strong survival ’em up with your mates as you fend off flesh-chompers left, right, and centre. Hayden reckons its use of permadeath makes it not only the story of survival but community too, with monotonous tasks often leading to encounters which can lead to the most memorable of encounters.
29. Ark: Survival Evolved

Progression is Ark: Survival Evolved ’s greatest feat, as you slowly transform from a washed-up cave dweller into a dinosaur-taming legend. If you’re a dino fan, then you’ll well catered for here, as you’re eventually able to use them as forms of transport or the equivalent of combine harvesters. And if you’re a fan of the traditional first-person survival sim, then you’ll find plenty to like here too. Expect lots of collecting fibers and fur to craft boots, maybe a spear to fend off enemy players or protect your allies.
The game’s also home to an absolute plethora of updates and expansions, which means you shouldn’t be starved of things to do. The last I checked David Tennant is in it?
28. The Long Dark

The Long Dark ’s vast, snow-blanketed wilderness is a harsh and uncompromising place. Its episodic story mode, Wintermute, serves as a gentle introduction to its harsh, yet beautiful world, but it’s the game’s survival mode that’s the true, open-ended test of your mettle, dropping you into a freezing world and then leaving you to find your own way. You’ve got to find shelter, and then venture out to find supplies, all while trying to keep your calorie intake up and your body warm. Getting ready to leave the shelter feels like planning a wilderness expedition.
You have to worry about your basic human needs and very little else, but that’s actually a pretty big job. You’ve got to work out your diet, how far you can travel on a full stomach, exactly how much time you’ll have before it gets dark and the temperature plummets, and then there are the contingency plans for things like blizzards - you’re not popping out for a quick drink.
There are lots of fascinating interpretations of the survival genre in this list, but The Long Dark sticks to the fundamentals and works magic with them. Instead of filling journeys from A to B with enemies, competing players and more junk than you could possibly know what to do with, The Long Dark fills them with atmosphere. Hikes are fraught with tension, as you keep an ear out for wolf howls and pray that the wind doesn’t pick up. There’s still occasionally time to play the part of tourist, however. The map is a starkly beautiful slice of Canadian wilderness, so who could be blamed for taking a break from scavenging to snap a few shots?
Where can I buy it: Steam , GOG , Humble
27. Project Zomboid

A zombie survival game that seems reluctant to leave early access, Project Zomboid is an isometric sandbox that drops you in a town and tasks you with simply not dying, which is easier said than done when hundreds of zombies are waiting to make a snack out of your brain.
Project Zomboid’s obsessively detailed simulation deserves top billing. Take vehicles, for instance; they’re a recent addition, and they pretty much function like real cars. You can lock them, break into them, hotwire them, fiddle with the thermostat, muck around with the radio, strip them for parts - everything’s taken into account. There are practical reasons for all this granular detail, so you’ll benefit from temperature controls during extreme weather while smashing a window to break into a car will make it less secure if zombies attack.
This simulation extends to the natural world, as well, so it takes into account precipitation levels, snowfall and temperature, and then the world reacts accordingly, physically changing and putting new demands on players. It’s all tremendously ambitious, and the long development time makes more sense when you see what’s been added over the years.
26. Neo Scavenger

There’s more than a hint of Fallout in Neo Scavenger ’s wasteland, especially if you survive for long enough for the story to start unfurling, but where Fallout is a post-apocalyptic power fantasy, Neo Scavenger never passes up an opportunity to remind you how vulnerable you are. This is a game where a little scratch can ultimately kill you. It’s merciless, but only if you look at each abrupt life as a failure, instead of what they really are: self-contained fables.
Killing lots of mutants won’t give you experience, and it won’t suddenly give you a trait that makes you a more effective mutant-murderer. Instead, through failure and success, you’ll learn the best way of dealing with whatever crisis you come across. It’s the best kind of permadeath. Starting again is exciting because it’s a chance to test out a new character build, mixing and matching different abilities and flaws. Certain locations are fixed, but the map does get reconfigured when you start a new life, so won’t be constantly repeating the same journeys.
25. V Rising

V Rising is a survival game with a hint of MMORPG and made by the Battlerite devs. If you thought that was a real combo of genres, then get this: you play as a vampire. Neat, right? It follows a similar structure to Valheim, in that you’ve got to gather resources, power up, and take on a multitude of bosses. However, it’s very much got its own bloody flavour. Being top-down, you’ve got this MOBA-style combat, combined with servers that support up to 40 players. And if you opt for a PVP server, you can engage in raids on enemy fortresses.
But if you’d rather experience the game on your lonesome or with a handful of mates in PVE, you can! The levelling journey is well-paced too, making the transition from vampire chump to vampire champ a consistently rewarding ride. If you needed any more convincing, check out our V Rising review for more in-depth thoughts.
24. Among Trees

Relaxation might not be what you associate with games in which you’ll die by standing around too much, but Among Trees manages it. You’re dropped in a beautiful forest, in which you can barely move for bumping into cute bunnies and woodpeckers, and then set about exploring. You scavenge for food to eat, but you quickly transition from stuffing raw mushrooms in your mouth to building a wee greenhouse next to your growing cabin. It’s survival as Henry David Thoreau imagined it, rather than Bear Grylls.
There are literal bears, though, among the game’s few threats. There are also difficulty settings, that let you fill your boots with poison mushrooms if you wish. It remains a beautiful forest to explore either way, and well worth a visit even in its current early access state.
23. UnReal World

The first release of Finnish survival roguelike UnReal World didn’t contain all of the seeds that would make it one of the world’s greatest and most distinctive survival games. By the mid-nineties, solo developer Sami Maaranen had discovered the formula that would allow the game to endure for more than two decades. Still in development, with regular updates adding major features as well as applying tweaks, UnReal World is a game about survival in harsh, realistic conditions. It’s a survival game that existed before the flood of early access craft ‘em ups, and it offers a more complete and compelling vision than anything else in the genre. The cost is complexity, an old-fashioned interface, and basic graphics, but the rewards are well worth the effort.
22. Cataclysm: Dark Days Ahead

Sin called it a roguelike you could play for the rest of your life , and “UnReal World set in a near future” where everything has gone wrong. You start by generating a world, then assign stats to a character, and then head off to survive. That might mean hiding in abandoned buildings, scavenging for food, and repairing machinery with the mechanics skills you gave yourself at the start of the game. It might mean becoming a rollerblading wunderkind, wiping out zombies with a slingshot, and designing your own bicycle from scratch using the game’s modular vehicle design system.
Whatever kind of person you become, the systems at your fingertips are absurdly detailed. C:DDA has variety and depth, and if you can overcome its ASCII graphics or simple tilesets, you will be rewarded with years and years of stories to tell.
21. Sons Of The Forest

Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun / Newnight
This spot was originally taken by this game’s predecessor, The Forest . Like its daddy, Sons Of The Forest is a survival game of PVEVC, where “C” means “cannibals”. You’re part of an elite team sent to rescue a billionaire who’s gone missing on a remote island, but when your chopper crash lands and almost your whole squad - apart from this one gormless but beloved guy called Kelvin - are taken out. So your challenge becomes a) survive on this forested island. Build a camp. Grow blueberries. Walk among the peaceful trees and enjoy the soothing sounds of the river.
And then of course there is b) notice some guy in a loincloth hanging on to a tree, staring at you. Oh, there’s another one on the path up ahead. Oh, he’s coming towards you. Oh no. Oh no! Sons Of The Forest is still in early access, but it took Steam by storm when it dropped, and there’s a lot to enjoy about it, from it’s kind of pulpy action style, to the idyllic locale, to the contrast with that when the cannibals turn up and you haven’t made any weapons yet. The survival and crafting systems are detailed and robust, and special mention goes to the inventory, which is a survival pack you unroll in front of you to rummage through. Good stuff. Have a glance at our review for more in-depth thoughts.
20. Raft

While other survival games pit you against a bleak, often zombie-ridden hellscape, Raft casts you out to sea. Trapped all alone (or with a bunch of friends if you play in co-op) on your titular pile of wooden planks with no land as far as the eye can see, Raft is a bit like the video game equivalent of The Life of Pi.
Except instead of trying to stay alive with a hungry tiger as your marooned next door neighbour, it’s the sharks you’ve got to worry about in this early access briny survival sim, as they’ll chomp chomp chomp their way through practically anything they can fit into their toothy maws - including that rickety raft of yours.
Fortunately, Raft isn’t just about defending your newfound home from the terrors of the deep. While hunger and thirst levels must be perpetually topped up, Raft also lets you indulge your slightly sillier side, giving you the scope to craft multi-storey palaces if you so wish, replete with shark head trophies and any other bits and bobs you find floating in the ocean. And goodness is there a lot of flotsam swimming about in Raft. Whatever happened to the wider world out there, you’ll find a lot of it’s ended up in the sea.
19. Pathologic

To say Pathologic is unlike any other survival game is a little bit redundant, as it’s unlike any other game, regardless of genre. It’s a survival RPG that’s laced with psychological horror. Playing one of three healers, your goal is to uncover the source of a plague that’s slowly killing an otherworldly town, and you only have twelve days to do it.
The town has its own rhythm and schedule, and events will occur whether you’re there to participate or not. As the plague spreads, the town’s inhabitants can start dying off, leaving them unable to provide you with information or help on your quest. Avenues are constantly being closed off, while others won’t open at all unless you’re playing as a specific character. And you won’t learn anything at all if you get sick or become malnourished. There’s a consequence to everything you do in Pathologic, though it’s not always apparent. You can increase your reputation by easing the pain of the ill, but those might be resources you need later, or for yourself. The whole game is a gloomy, ethical conundrum.
18. 7 Days To Die

At first glance, 7 Days To Die seems like just another zombie game, the intersection at which Minecraft somehow inexplicably collides with the likes of DayZ . But to dismiss it based on its crude graphics and misshapen landscapes would be to greatly underestimate this muddy-looking craft ’em up, as it’s probably the closest thing we’ve ever had to an interactive zombie movie. The zombies are proper Romero-style meatbags - their slow, shuffling corpses barely registering your presence as you venture further and further afield with each new scavenging trip.
It’s all designed to lull you into a false sense of security. You think, “Yeah, those traps will do the trick” when you hunker down at night. The game throws a swarm at you and all hell breaks loose. It’s classic zombie movie mistakes 101. You should have known better, and yet you fall into their trap every single damn time. Ultimately, 7 Days To Die knows how to apply just the right amount of pressure to keep you on your toes - provided it doesn’t chew them off in your sleep first, of course.
17. This War Of Mine

Between this and Frostpunk, it’s clear that 11 bit Studios clearly have a knack for creating bleak, yet tense survival management games . This War of Mine is set during a fictional war, tasking you with looking after a small group of survivors stuck inside a besieged city. During the day, survivors have to stay indoors, and that’s when you manage your hideout, choosing how to spend precious, fleeting resources. There are so many demands, but so few problems you can solve at once.
When the sun goes down, you can choose a survivor to send out into the darkness, to search for supplies in the ruined city. Terrible things happen out there. Your survivor might have to commit horrific acts to get the medicine and food their friends need, returning to the base covered in emotional scars. Guilt and shame can weigh on survivors, making them lose their appetite and even their will to live.
This War of Mine doesn’t glorify war or the ability to survive one; it tells harrowing stories and forces players to wrestle with the ethics of survival. With its more intimate perspective, it’s also quite a bit more effective than Frostpunk. It’s not easy to care about 100 faceless randos, but we felt completely responsible for the well-being of Boris, Katia and the rest of our survivors.
16. Astroneer

Playing Astroneer makes us incredibly happy. Survival should be hard, but Astroneer is built on a wild new idea: what if it actually wasn’t hard at all. Madness! The only thing you need to worry about is oxygen, but as long as you’re hooked up to a base or a vehicle, you’ll never run out, and you can keep topping up your own supply. With that taken care off, you can start expanding quickly, going on long expeditions into gorgeous alien frontiers. Rather than a rugged survivalist, you’re a scientist, studying new worlds and developing research outposts.
By jumping straight into advanced technology, you get to play around with rockets and construct factories while, in another survival game, you’d still be putting together your first log cabin. Before long, you’ll be flitting off to new worlds and moons, searching for more resources and scientific curiosities. Even without the struggle, Astroneer has plenty of momentum. It’s a lovely co-op game , too, and that extra pair of hands means you can bring more back with you from expeditions and start embarking on more ambitious research and construction projects earlier. Since it’s entirely cooperative, it’s not the type of survival game that will test friendships or devolve into arguments over who was meant to bring the spare battery.
15. Starbound

It’s very easy to wander off the beaten track in Starbound , as the sheer number of diversions and items you can chase is almost overwhelming. Eventually, though, you’ll realise just how far you’ve come. You’ll look back on the time when you placed your very first forge in your very first mud hut with a twinkle in your eye, for now you’ve got bigger fish to fry. You’re building huge space stations now and terraforming entire planets, fighting in space and building huge sci-fi cities.
It takes a while to get there, of course, but there’s so much to do in between. You might happen upon a huge anchor on a random planet, and above it, a flying pirate ship. Digging underground, you can encounter everything from ancient temples dedicated to eldritch gods, to research labs populated by ape scientists. It’s a pretty lively place. We must confess that we typically play on the casual difficulty. It means you don’t have to worry about hunger, and there are no additional penalties for death. Hunger can drive a survival game, but Starbound doesn’t have the scarcity to make starvation a meaningful problem. It’s just a nuisance. Even without hunger, there are other survival concerns. Acid rain, extreme temperatures, hostile aliens - there’s no dearth of ways to die.
14. Darkwood

Darkwood is so thick with dread that you almost have to wade through the forest. It’s a top-down, 2D horror affair that limits your field of view and then fills the shadows with things from your nightmares. You’re never getting the full picture, and any number of bone-chilling creatures could be lurking just out of reach of your torch.
When the sun is up, you can go outside and explore, scavenging for resources, but when night falls, you’ve got to get back to the comparative safety of your cabin and prepare for the worst. Board up windows, move furniture around, set traps underneath windows and next to doors, and then wait. At first, it’s just noises - scratching at the walls, knocking, banging - but it won’t stay that way. Eventually, your barricades will be smashed into splinters. The forest is surreal and always changing, moving further and further away from reality, so you’ll always feel like you’re on the back foot. You can’t trust the Darkwood, or the people who dwell within it.
13. Grounded

Grounded takes the 1980s themed Honey I Shrunk The Kids scenario and pops you in a fairly normal back garden, except that because you’re a tiny mite, it’s transformed “normal” into more of a “bug-infested hellscape”. With friends in tow, your aim is to raid these miniature science labs to gather intel on just what the heck’s going on, as well as turn the mandibles and shells of your fallen foes into nice pairs of pants and armour, a bit like Monster Hunter in a way.
In Hayden’s Grounded review , he says that the game’s one of his favourite video game locations, because the world feels like “a living ecosystem” better than any game he’s played. Sure, the base-building isn’t quite as snappy or intuitive as some others on this list, but the game as a whole is well worth embedding yourself in. I mean, how often is it you get to live a bug’s life, eh?
12. Oxygen Not Included

There’s something origami-like about how a game of Oxygen Not Included expands and unfolds over time, transforming from something so initially simple into a masterpiece of engineering with enormous depth and complexity.
Beginning your journey in the centre of a 2D asteroid with just three simple-minded clones (called dupes) at your beck and call, you must dig out some semblance of a base, cobble together some sources of food and oxygen to stop yourself dying within the first couple of days. Then it’s all about expanding outwards further and further in the hopes of finding solutions that are slightly more renewable, all while trying to keep your unbelievably suicidal dupes from fulfilling their greatest desires.
There’s no hand-holding in Oxygen Not Included, which can be what prevents a lot of people from gleaning what’s so wonderful about it. At times it can feel like you’re spinning half a dozen plates at the same time, each of which have a chance of spontaneously bursting into flames every few seconds. And that’s an intimidating feeling. But spend enough time taking care of your little dupe-farm and you’ll begin to understand the language of pipes and plumbing, ladders and bladders, pollution and prostitution (okay, we made that last one up, but there’s probably a mod out there somewhere).
11. Don’t Starve

Keeping your belly full is a persistent concern in Don’t Starve , but running out of nutritious grub is far from the only threat facing any survivors unlucky enough to get trapped in this gothic wilderness. Killer bees, territorial pig men and giant, one-eyed birds can all send you to an early grave, but other dangers are less tangible. Even your own mind can become an enemy, summoning shadowy hallucinations whose attacks are all too real.
You’ve got to push through it all, venturing out into the sanity-reducing wilderness to hunt for resources to feed your science and alchemy machines. It’s a race to get home before it gets dark, too, building up before the world becomes even more dangerous. Every step you take away from the safety of your campfire or base puts you more at risk, but the call of adventure is alluring.
10. Rust

Getting started in Rust can be a bit of a pain in the arse. After waking up naked and clueless, you’ll spend hours smashing rocks and chopping down trees like a Stone Age drone, and chances are that you’ll end up a snack for wild animals before you’ve had a chance to put a little base together.
Once you’re able to protect yourself, though, Rust’s appeal becomes more apparent. A gathering expedition is a lot more exciting when there’s a chance you’re going to get in a shootout with packs of other players. The competition creates predators and prey, which can lead to highly imbalanced fights, but that makes it all the more satisfying when you start fighting back and winning.
9. No Man’s Sky

It’s easy to oversell the idea that No Man’s Sky was a flop on release and has only clawed its way back to respectability in the years of updates since. Closer to the truth would be to say that it did a great job of providing a certain kind of experience at launch (and sold loads in the process), and now it provides a more varied set of experiences. From the beginning to now, one of those experiences has been survival. If you want to play No Man’s Sky on a set of hostile worlds, scrabbling to get enough resources to build shelter or to fuel the next desperate jump across the galaxy, you can do that. It will now reward you with prettier and more varied planets, giant sandworms, mechs to pilot, pals to partner with, and much more. There are still better survival games on this list - 20 of them, in fact - but few of them can match No Man’s Sky for scale and polish.
8. Escape From Tarkov

Craig Pearson summed up Escape From Tarkov best in his quest for toilet roll : “winning is simply a case of getting out of the vast levels with more stuff than you entered with”. It might be an online survival FPS and play a bit like a battle royale, but the goal is as ‘simple’ as making it out alive with stuff, so long as it’s more stuff. To do so, you’ll need to contend with unwelcoming, dark corridors, NPCs who can drop you in a heartbeat, and other players who – and you can’t blame ’em – just want to escape too.
As you may have guessed, the game isn’t like a Call Of Duty or Apex Legends. It’s brutal and unforgiving, with gunplay that leans hard into the pseudo-realistic military sims, than it does the arcade. Still, if you can embrace its grittiness there’s a great deal of stories to be had here.
7. Kenshi

Kenshi is lots of different things to lots of different people, but this strategic building survival RPG is all about finding your niche and making it work. Where many survival games run out of purpose as soon as you stabilise your food supply, Kenshi opens more possibilities. Whether it’s establishing a sustainable farm where you can recruit people to defend it, or becoming a skilled enough thief to supply your needs, Kenshi is a sumptuous bounty that feeds all kinds of play styles.
Its world doesn’t fit itself around your needs and wants, but it’s not particularly set against you, either. After all, the most common ‘bandits’ are often just bands of starving people fighting for scraps of food. It all gives our humble camp a sense of ambition beyond pure self-interest. This land could provide for people, we think. If we can protect it, maybe we could start to change things. And before we know it, we have a team of recruits running a factory in our absence while we lead our tiny founding trio out into the world, camping out under twin moons, fending off unfamiliar animals, and accidentally offending a powerful faction of religious bigots. Welp, we guess we have enemies now, gang. Best head back home and figure out how to survive this, too.
6. Minecraft

Minecraft is best known for the creative endeavours it’s inspired, like building all of Middle-Earth , but there’s a survival game in there too, full of deadly nights and Creepers waiting to blow up everything you’ve worked so hard to create. Hunger, thirst and death accompany you as you dig underground and explore infinite, procedural worlds full of monsters and dungeons.
A brilliant crafting system means that you have a great deal of freedom when it comes to how you survive. You might build automated systems and sprawling mines, becoming an industrial powerhouse; or maybe you’ll choose the simple life, rearing animals and growing crops. All the mods and game modes mean that you can essentially build your own survival game, or you can focus on something else, like building a flying pirate ship with a bunch of mates. And if you fancy an additional challenge, there’s a hardcore survival mode that deletes the entire world when you die. It’s not for the faint of heart.
5. Frostpunk

It’s hard to feel proud of a decision in Frostpunk . With the world frozen over and the last dregs of humanity huddled around a titanic furnace, you’ve got one overarching goal: keep them alive. To achieve this, your people need warmth and food, but that’s easier said than done.
It’s not enough to plonk down the right buildings and start sending your citizens out into the wilderness to hunt for resources. You need to nurture a society that can weather an ice age, and if that means enacting an emergency shift law to force workers to stay at their post for 24 hours to net you the coal you need to last another day, so be it. Your workers won’t be too pleased, but you’ll have to weather that potential disaster further down the road.
Trying to find a balance, keeping people content and alive, takes a lot of fine-tuning, but that’s the heart of Frostpunk. Even when a revolt is brewing and the frost is encroaching, there’s always a chance that moving some workers around or enacting a new law might save you. Even if things look like they’re going your way, you’re really teetering on a knife’s edge, and it might only take the sudden appearance of some refugees to shatter the delicate ecosystem of your city.
4. Valheim

Valheim is a Nordic delight where you and up to ten bearded buds attempt to break out of procedurally generated purgatory. To do so, you’ll need to gather up resources, build yourself some nice gear, and beat a handful of big baddies scattered across the land. Purgatory is actually quite nice – early on, at least. You’re dropped into a beautiful forest biome filled with boar and little goblin dudes, before you’ll need to venture out into dark woods and plains teeming with massive ogres and horrid, overgrown mosquitoes.
For a game that’s still in early access, it’s not only rich in things to conquer, but the little details too. The charming PS1 aesthetic, the way you can’t just stick a fire in an enclosed space and expect the smoke to magically dissipate, the bees and their happiness . Seriously, it’s a brilliant time sink that has all the staples of a good survival game and then some.
3. Terraria

Your first instinct might be to conflate Terraria with a 2D Minecraft, what with all the mining and crafting, but Terraria pinches just as much from action games and RPGs , sending you below the surface of its randomly-generated worlds to kill monsters and snatch loot. And because every dungeon worth its salt has a village full of people ready to help adventuring heroes, you can build one yourself. With shelter, NPC chums and workstations, you’ll be able to make increasingly more ambitious expeditions.
Since it launched all the way back in 2011, Re-Logic have lavished Terraria with updates, so there are a bewildering number of magical weapons and handy tools you’re able to craft, and plenty of monsters to test them against. The further into it you get, the more wild it becomes. You could lose yourself for days in the Wiki, reading up on how to get rocket boots or guns made out of sharks, but the joy of discovering things for yourself is also a huge part of Terraria’s appeal. It’s full of surprises, and you never really know what you’re going to find when you start chipping away at a cave wall with your pick-axe.
2. RimWorld

RimWorld ’s stranded colonists have a lot to contend with: wild animals, raider attacks, diseases, drug addiction and even their fellow colonists. It’s a harsh place, and keeping them alive takes a lot of work.
The elaborate simulation means that surviving amounts to more than just keeping colonists well-fed. If one of your colonists gets into a big fight with their partner, spiralling into a depression and refusing to eat, it won’t matter if you’ve got a freezer full of food. And what if that colonist is also the only doctor? Now, if someone gets badly injured, which is bound to happen, they might not be able to get the medical aid they so desperately require. Everything from stress to unseasonably hot weather can spell doom for your colony.
Not surprisingly, we’ve become pretty familiar with failure, but we’re still not tired of starting over again and again. There are just so many wildly different paths to take. We’ve built colonies inside mountains, nurtured villages of farmers, led a band of raiders and tried to get rich by starting a trading company. It’s mindbogglingly open, and even after poring countless hours into it, we’ve only scraped the surface.
1. Subnautica

Survival games don’t come more alien than Subnautica , or less hospitable to human life, and though a sequel, Subnautica: Below Zero , came out in 2023, its still building upon a foundation set by the original. Stuck on an underwater planet, you must delve below the waves to find food and resources, eventually constructing you very own underwater bases and submersible vehicles.
3D movement and a lack of oxygen make even the mundane act of gathering bits of scrap a tense adventure. Danger can come from any direction, and if you stay underwater for too long, you’ll get a nasty reminder that you’re the alien on this world, dying as you gasp for air. Vehicles, air pumps and oxygen tanks allow you to stay under for longer, however, and the more familiar you become with the world, the more the ocean starts to become home.
Massive forests of kelp, labyrinthine underwater caves, infinite voids that contain creatures the size of small islands - every biome feels like its own little world. You’re more Jacques Cousteau than Bear Grylls, cataloguing the denizens of the ocean and trying to unlock its mysteries. While there’s constant pressure to eat, drink and, obviously, breathe, Subnautica is also an uncommonly relaxing survival game. Despite myriad threats lurking in the water, it’s predominantly about the peaceful, thoughtful exploration of a stunning alien world.

7 Days To Die
PS4 , Xbox One , PC , Mac

Among Trees
PC

Ark: Survival Evolved
Android , iOS , PS4 , Xbox One , PC , Nintendo Switch

Astroneer
Xbox One , PC

Cataclysm: Dark Days Ahead
Video Game

Darkwood
PS4 , Xbox One , PC , Mac , Nintendo Switch

Don’t Starve
PS4 , Xbox One , PlayStation Vita , Nintendo Wii U , PC , Mac

Escape from Tarkov
PC

Frostpunk
Android , iOS , PS4 , Xbox One , PC

Grounded
Xbox One , PC

Kenshi
Video Game

Minecraft
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All 75 Arc Raiders Blueprints and where to get them
These areas have the highest chance of giving you Blueprints

Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun/Embark Studios

Looking for more Arc Raiders Blueprints? It’s a special day when you find a Blueprint, as they’re among the most valuable items in Arc Raiders. If you find a Blueprint that you haven’t already found, then you must make sure you hold onto it at all costs, because Blueprints are the key to one of the most important and powerful systems of meta-progression in the game.
This guide aims to be the very best guide on Blueprints you can find, starting with a primer on what exactly they are and how they work in Arc Raiders, before delving into exactly where to get Blueprints and the very best farming spots for you to take in your search.
We’ll also go over how to get Blueprints from other unlikely activities, such as destroying Surveyors and completing specific quests. And you’ll also find the full list of all 75 Blueprints in Arc Raiders on this page (including the newest Blueprints added with the Cold Snap update , such as the Deadline Blueprint and Firework Box Blueprint), giving you all the information you need to expand your own crafting repertoire.
In this guide:
- What are Blueprints in Arc Raiders?
- Full Blueprint list: All crafting recipes
- Where to find Blueprints in Arc Raiders Blueprints obtained from quests Blueprints obtained from Trials Best Blueprint farming locations

What are Blueprints in Arc Raiders?
Blueprints in Arc Raiders are special items which, if you manage to extract with them, you can expend to permanently unlock a new crafting recipe in your Workshop. If you manage to extract from a raid with an Anvil Blueprint, for example, you can unlock the ability to craft your very own Anvil Pistol, as many times as you like (as long as you have the crafting materials).
To use a Blueprint, simply open your Inventory while in the lobby, then right-click on the Blueprint and click “Learn And Consume” . This will permanently unlock the recipe for that item in your Workshop. As of the Stella Montis update, there are allegedly 75 different Blueprints to unlock - although only 68 are confirmed to be in the game so far. You can see all the Blueprints you’ve found and unlocked by going to the Workshop menu, and hitting “R” to bring up the Blueprint screen.
It’s possible to find duplicates of past Blueprints you’ve already unlocked. If you find these, then you can either sell them, or - if you like to play with friends - you can take it into a match and gift it to your friend so they can unlock that recipe for themselves. Another option is to keep hold of them until the time comes to donate them to the Expedition.
Full Blueprint list: All crafting recipes
Below is the full list of all the Blueprints that are currently available to find in Arc Raiders, and the crafting recipe required for each item:
| Blueprint | Type | Recipe | Crafted At |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bettina | Weapon | 3x Advanced Mechanical Components 3x Heavy Gun Parts 3x Canister | Gunsmith 3 |
| Blue Light Stick | Quick Use | 3x Chemicals | Utility Station 1 |
| Aphelion | Weapon | 3x Magnetic Accelerator 3x Complex Gun Parts 1x Matriarch Reactor | Gunsmith 3 |
| Combat Mk. 3 (Flanking) | Augment | 2x Advanced Electrical Components 3x Processor | Gear Bench 3 |
| Combat Mk. 3 (Aggressive) | Augment | 2x Advanced Electrical Components 3x Processor | Gear Bench 3 |
| Complex Gun Parts | Material | 2x Light Gun Parts 2x Medium Gun Parts 2x Heavy Gun Parts | Refiner 3 |
| Fireworks Box | Quick Use | 1x Explosive Compound 3x Pop Trigger | Explosives Station 2 |
| Gas Mine | Mine | 4x Chemicals 2x Rubber Parts | Explosives Station 1 |
| Green Light Stick | Quick Use | 3x Chemicals | Utility Station 1 |
| Pulse Mine | Mine | 1x Crude Explosives 1x Wires | Explosives Station 1 |
| Seeker Grenade | Grenade | 1x Crude Explosives 2x ARC Alloy | Explosives Station 1 |
| Looting Mk. 3 (Survivor) | Augment | 2x Advanced Electrical Components 3x Processor | Gear Bench 3 |
| Angled Grip II | Mod | 2x Mechanical Components 3x Duct Tape | Gunsmith 2 |
| Angled Grip III | Mod | 2x Mod Components 5x Duct Tape | Gunsmith 3 |
| Hullcracker | Weapon | 1x Magnetic Accelerator 3x Heavy Gun Parts 1x Exodus Modules | Gunsmith 3 |
| Launcher Ammo | Ammo | 5x Metal Parts 1x Crude Explosives | Workbench 1 |
| Anvil | Weapon | 5x Mechanical Components 5x Simple Gun Parts | Gunsmith 2 |
| Anvil Splitter | Mod | 2x Mod Components 3x Processor | Gunsmith 3 |
| ??? | ??? | ??? | ??? |
| Barricade Kit | Quick Use | 1x Mechanical Components | Utility Station 2 |
| Blaze Grenade | Grenade | 1x Explosive Compound 2x Oil | Explosives Station 3 |
| Bobcat | Weapon | 3x Advanced Mechanical Components 3x Light Gun Parts | Gunsmith 3 |
| Osprey | Weapon | 2x Advanced Mechanical Components 3x Medium Gun Parts 7x Wires | Gunsmith 3 |
| Burletta | Weapon | 3x Mechanical Components 3x Simple Gun Parts | Gunsmith 1 |
| Compensator II | Mod | 2x Mechanical Components 4x Wires | Gunsmith 2 |
| Compensator III | Mod | 2x Mod Components 8x Wires | Gunsmith 3 |
| Defibrillator | Quick Use | 9x Plastic Parts 1x Moss | Medical Lab 2 |
| ??? | ??? | ??? | ??? |
| Equalizer | Weapon | 3x Magnetic Accelerator 3x Complex Gun Parts 1x Queen Reactor | Gunsmith 3 |
| Extended Barrel | Mod | 2x Mod Components 8x Wires | Gunsmith 3 |
| Extended Light Mag II | Mod | 2x Mechanical Components 3x Steel Spring | Gunsmith 2 |
| Extended Light Mag III | Mod | 2x Mod Components 5x Steel Spring | Gunsmith 3 |
| Extended Medium Mag II | Mod | 2x Mechanical Components 3x Steel Spring | Gunsmith 2 |
| Extended Medium Mag III | Mod | 2x Mod Components 5x Steel Spring | Gunsmith 3 |
| Extended Shotgun Mag II | Mod | 2x Mechanical Components 3x Steel Spring | Gunsmith 2 |
| Extended Shotgun Mag III | Mod | 2x Mod Components 5x Steel Spring | Gunsmith 3 |
| Remote Raider Flare | Quick Use | 2x Chemicals 4x Rubber Parts | Utility Station 1 |
| Heavy Gun Parts | Material | 4x Simple Gun Parts | Refiner 2 |
| Venator | Weapon | 2x Advanced Mechanical Components 3x Medium Gun Parts 5x Magnet | Gunsmith 3 |
| Il Toro | Weapon | 5x Mechanical Components 6x Simple Gun Parts | Gunsmith 1 |
| Jolt Mine | Mine | 1x Electrical Components 1x Battery | Explosives Station 2 |
| Explosive Mine | Mine | 1x Explosive Compound 1x Sensors | Explosives Station 3 |
| Jupiter | Weapon | 3x Magnetic Accelerator 3x Complex Gun Parts 1x Queen Reactor | Gunsmith 3 |
| Light Gun Parts | Material | 4x Simple Gun Parts | Refiner 2 |
| Lightweight Stock | Mod | 2x Mod Components 5x Duct Tape | Gunsmith 3 |
| Lure Grenade | Grenade | 1x Speaker Component 1x Electrical Components | Utility Station 2 |
| Medium Gun Parts | Material | 4x Simple Gun Parts | Refiner 2 |
| Torrente | Weapon | 2x Advanced Mechanical Components 3x Medium Gun Parts 6x Steel Spring | Gunsmith 3 |
| Muzzle Brake II | Mod | 2x Mechanical Components 4x Wires | Gunsmith 2 |
| Muzzle Brake III | Mod | 2x Mod Components 8x Wires | Gunsmith 3 |
| Padded Stock | Mod | 2x Mod Components 5x Duct Tape | Gunsmith 3 |
| Shotgun Choke II | Mod | 2x Mechanical Components 4x Wires | Gunsmith 2 |
| Shotgun Choke III | Mod | 2x Mod Components 8x Wires | Gunsmith 3 |
| Shotgun Silencer | Mod | 2x Mod Components 8x Wires | Gunsmith 3 |
| Showstopper | Grenade | 1x Advanced Electrical Components 1x Voltage Converter | Explosives Station 3 |
| Silencer I | Mod | 2x Mechanical Components 4x Wires | Gunsmith 2 |
| Silencer II | Mod | 2x Mod Components 8x Wires | Gunsmith 3 |
| Snap Hook | Quick Use | 2x Power Rod 3x Rope 1x Exodus Modules | Utility Station 3 |
| Stable Stock II | Mod | 2x Mechanical Components 3x Duct Tape | Gunsmith 2 |
| Stable Stock III | Mod | 2x Mod Components 5x Duct Tape | Gunsmith 3 |
| Tagging Grenade | Grenade | 1x Electrical Components 1x Sensors | Utility Station 3 |
| Tempest | Weapon | 3x Advanced Mechanical Components 3x Medium Gun Parts 3x Canister | Gunsmith 3 |
| Trigger Nade | Grenade | 2x Crude Explosives 1x Processor | Explosives Station 2 |
| Vertical Grip II | Mod | 2x Mechanical Components 3x Duct Tape | Gunsmith 2 |
| Vertical Grip III | Mod | 2x Mod Components 5x Duct Tape | Gunsmith 3 |
| Vita Shot | Quick Use | 2x Antiseptic 1x Syringe | Medical Lab 3 |
| Vita Spray | Quick Use | 3x Antiseptic 1x Canister | Medical Lab 3 |
| Vulcano | Weapon | 1x Magnetic Accelerator 3x Heavy Gun Parts 1x Exodus Modules | Gunsmith 3 |
| Wolfpack | Grenade | 2x Explosive Compound 2x Sensors | Explosives Station 3 |
| Red Light Stick | Quick Use | 3x Chemicals | Utility Station 1 |
| Smoke Grenade | Grenade | 14x Chemicals 1x Canister | Utility Station 2 |
| Deadline | Mine | 3x Explosive Compound 2x ARC Circuitry | Explosives Station 3 |
| Trailblazer | Grenade | 1x Explosive Compound 1x Synthesized Fuel | Explosives Station 3 |
| Tactical Mk. 3 (Defensive) | Augment | 2x Advanced Electrical Components 3x Processor | Gear Bench 3 |
| Tactical Mk. 3 (Healing) | Augment | 2x Advanced Electrical Components 3x Processor | Gear Bench 3 |
| Yellow Light Stick | Quick Use | 3x Chemicals | Utility Station 1 |
Note: The missing Blueprints in this list likely have not actually been added to the game at the time of writing, because none of the playerbase has managed to find any of them. As they are added to the game, I will update this page with the most relevant information so you know exactly how to get all 75 Arc Raiders Blueprints.
Where to find Blueprints in Arc Raiders
Below is a list of all containers, modifiers, and events which maximise your chances of finding Blueprints:
- Certain quests reward you with specific Blueprints .
- Completing Trials has a high chance of offering Blueprints as rewards.
- Surveyors have a decent chance of dropping Blueprints on death.
- High loot value areas tend to have a greater chance of spawning Blueprints.
- Night Raids and Storms may increase rare Blueprint spawn chances in containers.
- Containers with higher numbers of items may have a higher tendency to spawn Blueprints. As a result, Blue Gate (which has many “large” containers containing multiple items) may give you a higher chance of spawning Blueprints.
- Raider containers (Raider Caches, Weapon Boxes, Medical Bags, Grenade Tubes) have increased Blueprint drop rates. As a result, the Uncovered Caches event gives you a high chance of finding Blueprints.
- Security Lockers have a higher than average chance of containing Blueprints.
- Certain Blueprints only seem to spawn under specific circumstances: Tempest Blueprint only spawns during Night Raid events. Vulcano Blueprint only spawns during Hidden Bunker events. Jupiter and Equaliser Blueprints only spawn during Harvester events.

Raider Caches, Weapon Boxes, and other raider-oriented container types have a good chance of offering Blueprints. |Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun/Embark Studios
Blueprints have a very low chance of spawning in any container in Arc Raiders, around 1-2% on average. However, there is a higher chance of finding Blueprints in particular container types. Specifically, you can find more Blueprints in Raider containers and security lockers.
Beyond this, if you’re looking for Blueprints you should focus on regions of the map which are marked as having particularly high-value loot. Areas such as the Control Tower in Dam Battlegrounds, the Arrival and Departure Buildings in Spaceport, and Pilgrim’s Peak in Blue Gate all have a better-than-average chance of spawning Blueprints somewhere amongst all their containers. Night Raids and Electromagnetic Storm events also increase the drop chances of certain Blueprints .
In addition to these containers, you can often loot Blueprints from destroyed Surveyors - the largest of the rolling ball ARC. Surveyors are more commonly found on the later maps - Spaceport and Blue Gate - and if one spawns in your match, you’ll likely see it by the blue laser beam that it casts into the sky while “surveying”.
Surveyors are quite well-armoured and will very speedily run away from you once it notices you, but if you can take one down then make sure you loot all its parts for a chance of obtaining certain unusual Blueprints.
Blueprints obtained from quests
One way in which you can get Blueprints is by completing certain quests for the vendors in Speranza. Some quests will reward you with a specific item Blueprint upon completion, so as long as you work through all the quests in Arc Raiders, you are guaranteed those Blueprints.
Here is the full list of all Blueprints you can get from quest rewards:
- Trigger Nade Blueprint: Rewarded after completing “Sparks Fly”.
- Lure Grenade Blueprint: Rewarded after completing “Greasing Her Palms”.
- Burletta Blueprint: Rewarded after completing “Industrial Espionage”.
- Hullcracker Blueprint (and Launcher Ammo Blueprint): Rewarded after completing “The Major’s Footlocker”.
Alas, that’s only 4 Blueprints out of a total of 75 to unlock, so for the vast majority you will need to find them yourself during a raid. If you’re intent on farming Blueprints, then it’s best to equip yourself with cheap gear in case you lose it, but don’t use a free loadout because then you won’t get a safe pocket to stash any new Blueprint you find. No pain in Arc Raiders is sharper than failing to extract with a new Blueprint you’ve been after for a dozen hours already.

One of the best ways to get Blueprints is by hitting three stars on all five Trials every week. |Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun/Embark Studios
Blueprints obtained from Trials
One of the very best ways to get Blueprints is as rewards for completing Trials in Arc Raiders. Trials are unlocked from Level 15 onwards, and allow you to earn rewards by focusing on certain tasks over the course of several raids. For example, one Trial might task you with dealing damage to Hornets, while another might challenge you to loot Supply Drops.
Trials refresh on a weekly basis, with a new week bringing five new Trials. Each Trial can offer up to three rewards after passing certain score milestones, and it’s possible to receive very high level loot from these reward crates - including Blueprints. So if you want to unlock as many Blueprints as possible, you should make a point of completing as many Trials as possible each week.
Best Blueprint farming locations
The very best way to get Blueprints is to frequent specific areas of the maps which combine high-tier loot pools with the right types of containers to search. Here are my recommendations for where to find Blueprints on every map, so you can always keep the search going for new crafting recipes to unlock.

Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun/Embark Studios
Dam Battlegrounds
The best places to farm Blueprints on Dam Battlegrounds are the Control Tower, Power Generation Complex, Ruby Residence, and Pale Apartments . The first two regions, despite only being marked on the map as mid-tier loot, contain a phenomenal number of containers to loot. The Control Tower can also contain a couple of high-tier Security Lockers - though of course, you’ll need to have unlocked the Security Breach skill at the end of the Survival tree.
There’s also a lot of reporting amongst the playerbase that the Residential areas in the top-left of the map - Pale Apartments and Ruby Residence - give you a comparatively strong chance of finding Blueprints. Considering their size, there’s a high density of containers to loot in both locations, and they also have the benefit of being fairly out of the way. So you’re more likely to have all the containers to yourself.
Buried City
The best Blueprint farming locations on Buried City are the Santa Maria Houses, Grandioso Apartments, Town Hall, and the various buildings of the New District . Grandioso Apartments has a lower number of containers than the rest, but a high chance of spawning weapon cases - which have good Blueprint drop rates. The others are high-tier loot areas, with plenty of lootable containers - including Security Lockers.
Spaceport
The best places to find Blueprints on Spaceport are the Arrival and Departure Buildings, as well as Control Tower A6 and the Launch Towers . All these areas are labelled as high-value loot regions, and many of them are also very handily connected to one another by the Spaceport wall, which you can use to quickly run from one area to the next. At the tops of most of these buildings you’ll find at least one Security Locker, so this is an excellent farming route for players looking to find Blueprints.
The downside to looting Blueprints on Spaceport is that all these areas are hotly contested, particularly in Duos and Squads. You’ll need to be very focused and fast in order to complete the full farming route.

Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun/Embark Studios
Blue Gate
Blue Gate tends to have a good chance of dropping Blueprints, potentially because it generally has a high number of containers which can hold lots of items; so there’s a higher chance of a Blueprint spawning in each container. In my experience, the best Blueprint farming spots on Blue Gate are Pilgrim’s Peak, Raider’s Refuge, the Ancient Fort, and the Underground Complex beneath the Warehouse .
All of these areas contain a wealth of containers to loot. Raider’s Refuge has less to loot, but the majority of the containers in and around the Refuge are raider containers, which have a high chance of containing Blueprints - particularly during major events.
Stella Montis
On the whole, Stella Montis seems to have a very low drop rate for Blueprints (though a high chance of dropping other high-tier loot). If you do want to try farming Blueprints on this map, the best places to find Blueprints in Stella Montis are Medical Research, Assembly Workshop, and the Business Center . These areas have the highest density of containers to loot on the map.
In addition to this, the Western Tunnel has a few different Security Lockers to loot, so while there’s very little to loot elsewhere in this area of the map, it’s worth hitting those Security Lockers if you spawn there at the start of a match.
That wraps up this primer on how to get all the Blueprints in Arc Raiders as quickly as possible. With the Expedition system constantly resetting a large number of players’ Blueprints, it’s more important than ever to have the most up-to-date information on where to find all these Blueprints.
While you’re here, be sure to check out our Arc Raiders best guns tier list , as well as our primers on the best skills to unlock and all the different Field Depot locations on every map.

ARC Raiders
PS5 , Xbox Series X/S , PC
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