Starport Delta

45

Top Critic Average

17%

Critics Recommend

Screen Rant
2 / 5
Digital Chumps
5 / 10
GameSkinny
4 / 10
GameGrin
5 / 10
Gamezo
8.3 / 10
KonsoliFIN
2 / 5
Creators: Cloudfire Studios
Release Date: Mar 27, 2020 - PC
Share This Game:

Starport Delta Trailers

Starport Delta Release Trailer thumbnail

Starport Delta Release Trailer

Starport Delta Teaser Trailer thumbnail

Starport Delta Teaser Trailer

Starport Delta Alpha Gameplay Trailer thumbnail

Starport Delta Alpha Gameplay Trailer


Starport Delta Screenshots

Critic Reviews for Starport Delta

Starport Delta is a lackluster strategy simulation devastated by an unbalanced economy and brutally high stakes.

Read full review

Overall, Starport Delta is a relatively solid indie title

Read full review

GameSkinny

RobertPIngram
GameSkinny

Some signs of life persist, but this space game is largely a disappointing and tedious battle with a slothlike pace.

Read full review

A space station builder with very little to build. It's a great concept but it's just not well executed enough and it's too shallow to be the game it deserves to be.

Read full review

There is nothing I can say other than that I adore Starport Delta. The game has immense polish, solid writing, and strong gameplay. The team at Cloudfire built the city builder that they wanted to play, and it shows. Whether it’s some of the cheeky things you can do (like airlock a developer) or the addition of space worms, the game has charm.

Read full review

Starport Delta is a space city-building indie game with an intriguing concept but ultimately frustrating execution. Players construct a modular space station using hex-based tiles, balancing infrastructure like power, oxygen, and food with residential and resource buildings. Despite a charming aesthetic and humorous touches, the game suffers from limited building variety, strict range limitations, and unforgiving economic mechanics—especially its automatic selling of random buildings when funds dip below zero, often triggering a collapse. While resource and space management are central, excessive micromanagement and lack of flexibility turn the experience into a chore rather than a joy. A missed opportunity in a genre that could use more accessible entries.

Review in Finnish | Read full review