DarkSwitch Reviews
DarkSwitch represents a new, fresh take on a genre that largely focuses on a flat 2-dimensional axis. Fans of the city-building genre, as well as newcomers, will find plenty to enjoy here.
DarkSwitch is an intriguing city builder with a strong core idea, where a settlement built around a massive tree creates a more constrained, uncertain, and spatially focused take on the genre. Fog, light mechanics, and vertical design come together with an atmospheric score by Akira Yamaoka to strong effect. However, the game doesn’t fully realize its potential: exploration feels functional, citizens lack depth, and larger settlements suffer from readability issues, with its striking presentation sometimes working against clarity. Overall, it remains a distinctive and atmospheric survival city builder with clear ambition, but uneven execution prevents it from fully delivering on its promise.
Review in German | Read full review
DarkSwitch is one of the most creative survival city builders in years, delivering an atmospheric and genuinely original strategy experience. Unfortunately, technical problems and frustrating design issues stop it from fully reaching its incredible potential.
Darkswitch is another case of a game that should have been released on early access being unleashed to the world at large as version 1.0. It feels thoroughly incomplete and untested thanks to its myriad of bugs, glitches, and questionable design choices. While there is a solid understanding of core mechanics buried here, it is unfortunately overshadowed by every other detail of the execution.