GamesCity BuilderFrostpunk 2In Frostpunk 2’s post-post-apocalypse ‘it’s not nature that’s your worst enemy, it’s human nature,’ and nothing proves that like my doomed attempt at turbo-communismWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
GamesCity BuilderFrostpunk 2In Frostpunk 2’s post-post-apocalypse ‘it’s not nature that’s your worst enemy, it’s human nature,’ and nothing proves that like my doomed attempt at turbo-communismWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
(Image credit: 11 bit studios)

The city must not fall, which is unfortunate, because the city is very much in the process of falling. Oh, it went alright there for a while: An egalitarian oasis among the glaciers, a frostbit upland of organised labour, respect for the environment, and an aggressive equal pay policy that saw the lowliest layabout earn the same wage as our most brilliant scientists.
But the problem with socialism is you eventually run out of, hang on, coal? It’s that you run out of coal. And then the problems start. The ice I’d held at bay crept in on my infirmaries and creches, the machines that reproduced me stuttered and failed, and my subjects split into two factions: The ones who wanted my head, and the dead.
(Image credit: 11 Bit Studios)

Frostpunk 2 is as unforgiving as its forebear, but wait, it’s harder. In the first game, your authority was pretty much untrammelled. Passing laws was a matter of decree: You waved your hand and whole new social orders sprang into being.
But those were the old days. Back then you were playing the role of the Captain, the undisputed master and commander of Frostpunk the First’s post-snowpocalyptic society. “What I say, goes” was the name of the game.
But now the Captain is dead and you’re playing his handpicked successor, the Steward. Worse: The rabble have got into this dangerous new thing calleddemocracy,effectively a massive conspiracy to make your job harder, and doing things like adding sawdust to everyone’s daily meals or harvesting their organs after death now requires a lengthy parley with the city’s factions and a tense vote in parliament.
Pure ideology
“It’s not nature that’s your worst enemy, it’s human nature.”
The biggest gaming news, reviews and hardware deals
(Image credit: 11 Bit Studios)

In my game—which, I should emphasise, never gottoofar due to the ‘running out of coal’ thing—those groups were divided into Frostlanders (hardcore adapters), New Londoners (tech-minded progress types), and the Stalwarts, the Captain’s old hardcore supporters who are into conquering the frost with technology and cracking down hard on anyone who thinks otherwise.
All of them have their own opinion of you, and the communities can spawn factions, smaller but more dedicated cadres determined to push particular ideologies or policies. I only encountered one in my playthrough—a cabal determined to roll back my policies and implement a more meritocratic society—but Stokalski assures me it can get “crowded” and “crazy” if you let it, particularly outside the game’s story mode.
Anyway, who cares what the factions think? I knew what my goal was from the start. A big objective icon declared that I had 523 weeks of remaining coal, time in which it was essential I found some sort of new energy source. I also had a housing crisis and a healthcare shortage on my hands, and a lack of consumer goods had produced an epidemic of crime in my streets.
(Image credit: 11 Bit Studios)

Playing to the base
It was all so obvious: The conditions were ripe for communism. Actually, not just communism.Turbo-communism. A great leap into the final stage of history. A glittering ice city where war and class were scary stories for the children.
(Image credit: 11 Bit Studios)

Inexplicably, none of them were keen on building the Fifth International. The laws I wanted to pass would ensure that everyone in my city got access to basic necessities regardless of whether they worked or not, and that everyone whodidwork would earn the same pay, from the garbagemen to doctors.
This was a conundrum. The Stalwartshatedthis. As meritocratic, progress-obsessed reactionaries, they regarded my plans for the city as an insidious communist plot, which was only two-thirds true. Luckily, there were only 10 of them, so it wasn’t worth my time engaging. Into the dustbin of history they went.
The Frostlanders and New Londoners were trickier. Both were split more-or-less down the middle. When I checked the policy screen to check my laws' potential to pass, the predicted outcome was ominously uncertain: 20-or-so against, 30-or-so for, and all the rest infuriatingly undecided. I could roll the dice if I wanted—I’d passed other laws where the undecideds ultimately came down in my favour—but this was the future of the human race we were talking about. I didn’t want to leave things to chance.
(Image credit: 11 Bit Studios)

So it was time to gladhand, Capitol Hill-style. The Frostlanders liked me more than the New Londoners already. The reason was Frostpunk 2’s new research system: Rather than progressing linearly up a tech tree, each community in your city pitches various iterations on an idea and you choose which one to go with. I’d been predisposed to the Frostlanders' more sustainable inventions up until this point, and they were keen on me in return.
So I made them a promise: I’d pass a law they wanted—mandatory civilian support for our explorers out in the wasteland—in exchange for their support on my whole ice-communism thing, and so a deal was struck. The law passed easily, a new world was built, everyone lived happily ever after.
Iced out
For a bit. You’ve got to give me this: Things actually went real well for a while there. Sure, the equal pay law kicked off a chain of events that saw my city’s more managerial and bourgeois elements grumble and mither, but people were—mostly—quite happy under the new order.
But here’s the rub: That law I promised to pass for the Frostlanders? Well, not everyone was keen on that either. I had to bargain its way through parliament again, which meant more promises, which led to more promises, which led to more promises. Awful politician that I am, I actually moved heaven and Earth to keep them all, and the simple process of keeping track of everything I’d pledged to everyone distracted me from the minor task of securing a new fuel source for our heaters.
(Image credit: 11 Bit Studios)

So the generator wheezed its last, the rime built up on our infrastructure, and all the happiness meters for those groups that been oh-so-pleased with me flipped to angry, empty red. It wasn’t long before I was booted from power and my beautiful frostbitten soviet went the way of the Paris Commune.
(Image credit: 11 Bit Studios)

But for a moment, a brief, shining moment, we had our glittering ice city.
The post-post-apocalypse
So Stokalski is right—which I suppose isn’t surprising, given he co-directed the game—Frostpunk 2 is a few steps up on Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. If the first game was about the post-apocalypse—scrounging together the literal necessities for existence—then this game is postthat. It’s about figuring out what the future is after the entire world’s been destroyed, although even if the questions of food and coal are settled for now, they always threaten becoming an issue all over again.
And so far? I’m into it. From my time with the game, Frostpunk 2’s political elements feel like a natural evolution of the first-game’s comparatively rudimentary Discontent/Hope and Order/Faith systems, forcing you to consider what your citizens want and not just what they need. Success is no longer just an issue of having enough food to outlast a whiteout, it’s a much broader category. So too is failure.
(Image credit: 11 Bit Studios)

Frostpunk 2 is out on July 25 onSteam,GOG, andEpic.
More about city builderI played a whopping 23 city builders in 2024, and here are my 5 favoritesBest City Builder 2024: Manor LordsLatestToday’s Wordle answer for Saturday, January 11See more latest►
More about city builderI played a whopping 23 city builders in 2024, and here are my 5 favoritesBest City Builder 2024: Manor LordsLatestToday’s Wordle answer for Saturday, January 11See more latest►
More about city builderI played a whopping 23 city builders in 2024, and here are my 5 favoritesBest City Builder 2024: Manor Lords
More about city builder
I played a whopping 23 city builders in 2024, and here are my 5 favoritesBest City Builder 2024: Manor Lords
I played a whopping 23 city builders in 2024, and here are my 5 favorites
I played a whopping 23 city builders in 2024, and here are my 5 favorites
Best City Builder 2024: Manor Lords
Best City Builder 2024: Manor Lords
LatestToday’s Wordle answer for Saturday, January 11See more latest►
Latest
Today’s Wordle answer for Saturday, January 11
Today’s Wordle answer for Saturday, January 11
Today’s Wordle answer for Saturday, January 11
See more latest►
Most Popular
The Witcher 3’s now 2-year-old bonus quest is our first taste of the ‘vibe’ CD Projekt is going for in The Witcher 4
2024 was the year updates for old games beat out all the new ones for me
Train like you game with this adventure-inspired workout
‘It’s simply impossible to make a difficulty level that’s just right for all players’: How Final Fantasy 14’s lead battle designer has been playing a precarious balancing game for Dawntrail’s dungeons and raids
Please join me in getting super excited for all the cool looking survival games coming in 2025 (and beyond)
Competitive shooters are at a crucial crossroads in 2025: ‘sweaty’ teamplay vs. casual fun
Call of Duty’s $28 Squid Game skins are the perfect crossover for our capitalist dystopia, and Activision knows exactly what it’s doing
These are the 14 biggest upcoming RPGs of 2025—get ready for another amazing year for the genre
Five new Steam games you probably missed (January 6, 2025)
I’ve seen enough: No more forcing singleplayer studios to make mediocre live service games
HARDWARE BUYING GUIDESLATEST GAME REVIEWS1Best Steam Deck accessories in Australia for 2025: Our favorite docks, powerbanks and gamepads2Best graphics card for laptops: the mobile GPUs I’d want in my next gaming laptop3Best mini PCs in 2025: The compact computers I love the most4Best 14-inch gaming laptop: The top compact gaming laptops I’ve held in these hands5Best Mini-ITX motherboards in 2025: My pick from all the mini mobo marvels I’ve tested1Thank Goodness You’re Here! review2Shiren the Wanderer: The Mystery Dungeon of Serpentcoil Island review3WD Black SN850X 8 TB NVMe SSD review4Ikea Utespelare desk review5Asus ROG Harpe Ace Mini wireless mouse review
HARDWARE BUYING GUIDESLATEST GAME REVIEWS1Best Steam Deck accessories in Australia for 2025: Our favorite docks, powerbanks and gamepads2Best graphics card for laptops: the mobile GPUs I’d want in my next gaming laptop3Best mini PCs in 2025: The compact computers I love the most4Best 14-inch gaming laptop: The top compact gaming laptops I’ve held in these hands5Best Mini-ITX motherboards in 2025: My pick from all the mini mobo marvels I’ve tested1Thank Goodness You’re Here! review2Shiren the Wanderer: The Mystery Dungeon of Serpentcoil Island review3WD Black SN850X 8 TB NVMe SSD review4Ikea Utespelare desk review5Asus ROG Harpe Ace Mini wireless mouse review
HARDWARE BUYING GUIDESLATEST GAME REVIEWS1Best Steam Deck accessories in Australia for 2025: Our favorite docks, powerbanks and gamepads2Best graphics card for laptops: the mobile GPUs I’d want in my next gaming laptop3Best mini PCs in 2025: The compact computers I love the most4Best 14-inch gaming laptop: The top compact gaming laptops I’ve held in these hands5Best Mini-ITX motherboards in 2025: My pick from all the mini mobo marvels I’ve tested1Thank Goodness You’re Here! review2Shiren the Wanderer: The Mystery Dungeon of Serpentcoil Island review3WD Black SN850X 8 TB NVMe SSD review4Ikea Utespelare desk review5Asus ROG Harpe Ace Mini wireless mouse review
HARDWARE BUYING GUIDESLATEST GAME REVIEWS1Best Steam Deck accessories in Australia for 2025: Our favorite docks, powerbanks and gamepads2Best graphics card for laptops: the mobile GPUs I’d want in my next gaming laptop3Best mini PCs in 2025: The compact computers I love the most4Best 14-inch gaming laptop: The top compact gaming laptops I’ve held in these hands5Best Mini-ITX motherboards in 2025: My pick from all the mini mobo marvels I’ve tested1Thank Goodness You’re Here! review2Shiren the Wanderer: The Mystery Dungeon of Serpentcoil Island review3WD Black SN850X 8 TB NVMe SSD review4Ikea Utespelare desk review5Asus ROG Harpe Ace Mini wireless mouse review
HARDWARE BUYING GUIDESLATEST GAME REVIEWS
1Best Steam Deck accessories in Australia for 2025: Our favorite docks, powerbanks and gamepads
1Best Steam Deck accessories in Australia for 2025: Our favorite docks, powerbanks and gamepads
1
Best Steam Deck accessories in Australia for 2025: Our favorite docks, powerbanks and gamepads
2Best graphics card for laptops: the mobile GPUs I’d want in my next gaming laptop
2Best graphics card for laptops: the mobile GPUs I’d want in my next gaming laptop
2
Best graphics card for laptops: the mobile GPUs I’d want in my next gaming laptop
3Best mini PCs in 2025: The compact computers I love the most
3Best mini PCs in 2025: The compact computers I love the most
3
Best mini PCs in 2025: The compact computers I love the most
4Best 14-inch gaming laptop: The top compact gaming laptops I’ve held in these hands
4Best 14-inch gaming laptop: The top compact gaming laptops I’ve held in these hands
4
Best 14-inch gaming laptop: The top compact gaming laptops I’ve held in these hands
5Best Mini-ITX motherboards in 2025: My pick from all the mini mobo marvels I’ve tested
5Best Mini-ITX motherboards in 2025: My pick from all the mini mobo marvels I’ve tested
5
Best Mini-ITX motherboards in 2025: My pick from all the mini mobo marvels I’ve tested
1Thank Goodness You’re Here! review
1Thank Goodness You’re Here! review
1
Thank Goodness You’re Here! review
2Shiren the Wanderer: The Mystery Dungeon of Serpentcoil Island review
2Shiren the Wanderer: The Mystery Dungeon of Serpentcoil Island review
2
Shiren the Wanderer: The Mystery Dungeon of Serpentcoil Island review
3WD Black SN850X 8 TB NVMe SSD review
3WD Black SN850X 8 TB NVMe SSD review
3
WD Black SN850X 8 TB NVMe SSD review
4Ikea Utespelare desk review
4Ikea Utespelare desk review
4
Ikea Utespelare desk review
5Asus ROG Harpe Ace Mini wireless mouse review
5Asus ROG Harpe Ace Mini wireless mouse review
5
Asus ROG Harpe Ace Mini wireless mouse review