I played the lawless competitive RPG dominating Steam Next Fest like the second coming of Dark and Darker, and I'm immediately biased because I haven't died yet

Dungeonborne
(Image credit: Mithril Interactive)

I'm getting deja vu, folks, because a first-person PvPvE dungeon-crawling RPG is topping the Steam Next Fest trends. This time it's Dungeonborne, a rather fittingly named riff on last year's Dark and Darker, which has left the door open for a competitor like this by still not being on Steam following a legal spat with Nexon

So far, Dungeonborne is a fairly familiar extraction RPG. Make a character, choose a class, build a loadout, then pop into an easier solo world or harder group world in search of loot and XP. If you die, whether that's to a monster or a trap or another player, you lose all the stuff you have on you. This frames the genre-defining decision-making that goes into each excursion – what to bring with you, and what to keep in storage for a rainy day, and boy does it rain a lot. If you find some great loot, you can escape using portals which spawn in as a battle royale-style field corrals the lobby into smaller and smaller spaces, further stoking the fires of PvP.  

I've put a bit of time into the Steam Next Fest demo, and can say that a lot of classes and weapons will feel right at home in the hands of seasoned Dark and Darker players, as will much of the pre-launch jank. It plays like a first-person fantasy RPG in the vein of Chivalry or just The Elder Scrolls, but with even more deliberate attack animations, which is a nice way of calling them slow as molasses in an igloo. The game's Steam forums and budding Reddit community are awash with almost nostalgic complaints about class balance and connection issues, but there's also a fair bit of not undeserved praise. 

Dungeonborne

(Image credit: Mithril Interactive)

This formula worked for Dark and Darker, and it works reasonably well here, even if it is in dire need of polish and, for god's sake, faster interaction animations. A lot of the fun is baked into the social dynamics and inherent tension. Rooting around your inventory is fun in a Resident Evil kind of way, and it's exciting on a base level to plunder the map while keeping one eye on the ever-ticking timer and another on the lookout for approaching monsters or players. 

That said, I find myself unusually ready to be kind to Dungeonborne for the simple fact that it's padding my ego like my character pads his pauldrons. I've played a few lobbies and somehow haven't died, not even after raising the obvious death flag of buying a fancy new sword. I can tell you right now that I am not the God King of Space when it comes to extraction RPGs, so I'd attribute this inexplicable success to a few lucky breaks. 

Dungeonborne

(Image credit: Mithril Interactive)

First of all, I apparently chose the broken class: the tanky, melee-focused Fighter. See, a decade of writing about games, and therefore playing a lot of demos for games I'm unfamiliar with, has taught me a golden rule. When in doubt, pick the heavyweight class. When I'm in my element and actually feel confident with a game, I usually opt for glass cannons that are all about damage and dodging. But when cornered or confused, I pull out the greatsword and the heavy armor every time. If I'm going to be dumbfounded, I may as well be durable, if only to stay alive long enough to understand what killed me. 

I've also crucially managed to avoid any duels with long-range fighters, who I suspect could turn me into ash or a pin cushion twice over in the time it would take my armored ass to turn around. Don't get me started on the greatsword swings, which you need to queue up two to three business days in advance of your attack actually connecting. Spells feel a little slow to recharge but still hurt, and throwable items seem ludicrously overpowered, and that's bad news for my knight. So I will continue to exclusively bully the people who don't seem to understand how shields and charge attacks work. If you want to join in, you've got until February 12 to try Dungeonborne's free demo. 

More Steam Next Fest fun: I woke up and destroyed my heartstrings with the Psychonauts-esque Steam Next Fest demo for this surreal puzzle platformer about family. 

CATEGORIES
Austin Wood
Senior writer

Austin has been a game journalist for 12 years, having freelanced for the likes of PC Gamer, Eurogamer, IGN, Sports Illustrated, and more while finishing his journalism degree. He's been with 12DOVE since 2019. They've yet to realize his position is a cover for his career-spanning Destiny column, and he's kept the ruse going with a lot of news and the occasional feature, all while playing as many roguelikes as possible.

Read more
Standing below the imposing Monolith in Empyreal with a glaive equipped, this is a piece of key art from the game
This looter slasher mashes up Remnant 2 with shades of Final Fantasy 14 and lashings of special moves, all in an action-packed Steam Next Fest demo
The First Berserker: Khazan protagonist
Steam Next Fest hasn’t even started, but I’m already obsessed with the subtly Soulslike demo for this “hardcore” action RPG with over 3,000 reviews of its own
Rise of Rebellion
An apparent ex-FromSoftware dev has a janky action RPG in Steam Next Fest, so obviously I had to play it – and yep, the opening shot is straight out of Dark Souls
Shape of Dreams heroes stand around a fire
Someone combined Diablo and League of Legends for a roguelike co-op MOBA with Risk of Rain energy, and it deserves the hype it's getting in Steam Next Fest
Elden Ring Nightreign
Elden Ring Nightreign feels like a modded version of FromSoftware's best game ever – and after 3 hours, I only wanted to play more
One Fellowship player takes on a large boss
This multiplayer dungeon RPG captures the fun of MMOs like World of Warcraft and Final Fantasy 14 with no grind or subscription, and a killer Steam Next Fest demo
Latest in RPG
Dragon Age 2
Veteran Dragon Age dev says one big delay is better than several small ones: "You are laying band-aid on top of band-aid on top of band-aid"
Baldur's Gate 3 screenshot showing Astarion, a pale male elf with short curly white hair and red eyes, looking over his shoulder with a smirk on his face
Baldur's Gate 3 Astarion actor comes face to face with what might just be the best merch to come of the RPG yet – a 5-foot Funko Pop figure of his character
The Witcher 3 screenshot of Geralt
Avowed and Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 tap into the same thing that makes The Witcher 3 so compelling – and it's something I'm always looking for in RPGs
Atomfall
Atomfall boss "very familiar" with Baldur's Gate 3 director's frustrations with publishers, as he recalls horror advice that games are "faster to make" if you "make fewer bugs"
Official art for Hopetown, featuring a group of miners looking towards the camera.
The battle to steal the Disco Elysium successor's spotlight continues as former and current ZA/UM devs reveal teasers for their new RPGs simultaneously
Horizon Forbidden West
Horizon Zero Dawn's Aloy is the star of Sony's leaked AI-powered character prototype, which allows users to ask questions to an unsettling, emotionless version of the protagonist
Latest in News
inZOI Character Studio screenshot showing a young woman with short black/pink hair, black cat-like ears, and a black blouse with a bowtie
The creator of upcoming life sim Inzoi says he was "recklessly brave to even think about creating a game of this scale"
Rise of the Ronin
A year after its PS5 launch, Rise of the Ronin debuts on PC to "Mixed" reviews and performance complaints: "Stuttering on a 4090 is just... no"
Rise of the Ronin's photo mode offers some wonderful shots
On the heels of Rise of the Ronin's PC launch, its director says there's a "significant" amount of Japanese Switch gamers: "I am closely watching how this will change with the release of Switch 2"
Stardew Valley Castle Village mod
Stardew Valley Expanded creator is building an "even more ambitious" mod with a whole new city and "dungeons inspired by The Legend of Zelda"
Dino Crisis 2 art showing a young woman and man back-to-back amid tall green grass, both with their weapons drawn
Dino Crisis gets a fresh trademark filing by Capcom, but it might not mean the 26-year-old survival horror franchise will get a new installment like fans expect
Cujo
Netflix is making a brand new adaptation of Cujo, the infamous Stephen King book about a killer dog