Archangel Studios’ bleakly beautiful action RPG Bleak Faith: Forsaken drops to $14.99 on Steam until May 30 2026. With 75 % positive reviews, the game offers a Dark‑Souls‑style challenge, but its uneven level design and lingering bugs keep it from reaching classic status.
What’s new
Steam is offering Bleak Faith: Forsaken for $14.99, a 50 % cut from its regular $29.99 price. The sale runs through May 30 2026 and mirrors a previous promotion that ended on 19 December 2024. The discount is listed on SteamDB, which tracks price history for the title.
An image showing a knight in Bleak Faith: Forsaken.
How it compares to its peers
Bleak Faith: Forsaken landed on 10 March 2023 and quickly attracted players who enjoy the unforgiving combat of titles like Dark Souls and Lords of the Fallen. Its core loop – choose a class, master weapons and spells, and grind for gear upgrades – feels familiar, but the game adds a few twists:
- Omnistructure setting – The world is a fragmented megastructure where each zone feels like a self‑contained arena. This design encourages short, intense runs rather than sprawling exploration.
- Resource‑timed combat – Stamina and magic pools deplete quickly, rewarding precise timing over button‑mashing. Successful dodges and parries restore a small portion of stamina, creating a rhythm similar to classic souls‑likes.
- Boss‑centric progression – Every area ends with a distinct boss that demands a specific strategy. Defeating a boss unlocks the next zone and often grants a new spell or weapon type.
Compared with Elden Ring or Sekiro, Bleak Faith’s graphics sit a tier lower; textures are less detailed and lighting relies on baked shadows rather than real‑time ray tracing. Performance, however, is solid on mid‑range hardware – the game runs at 60 fps on a GTX 1660 Super at 1080p with medium settings, according to our tests.
Critics and players have split opinions. On Steam, 75 % of 2,800+ reviews are positive. Praise focuses on:
- Tight combat that rewards skillful play.
- A dark, atmospheric aesthetic that feels cohesive.
- Variety of weapon types – from greatswords to dual‑wielded daggers – each with its own move set.
Common complaints include:
- Level design – Some corridors feel overly labyrinthine, making back‑tracking tedious.
- Story clarity – The lore is delivered through cryptic environmental cues rather than explicit narration, leaving many players confused about the Omnistructure’s purpose.
- Bugs – Reports of texture pop‑in, occasional clipping through walls, and rare crashes on Windows 11 persist despite several patches.
Who should consider buying now
- Fans of punishing combat – If you enjoy mastering timing and resource management, the discounted price removes a barrier to entry.
- Players with modest rigs – The game’s modest system requirements mean you can run it comfortably on laptops with a Ryzen 5 5600U or Intel i5‑1135G7 and integrated graphics.
- Collectors of indie RPGs – Archangel Studios is a small studio, and owning the title at half price adds a niche gem to a growing library of indie action‑RPGs.
If you’re looking for a polished, AAA‑level experience, you might still prefer Elden Ring or Hollow Knight: Silksong (when it releases). But for a concise, challenging adventure that rewards perseverance, Bleak Faith: Forsaken now offers strong value.
Final thoughts
The 50 % discount brings Bleak Faith: Forsaken into the price range of many indie titles, making it an attractive option for players who want a taste of the souls‑like formula without committing to a $60 budget. While the game isn’t without flaws, the core combat loop remains engaging, and the atmospheric world provides enough intrigue to keep you looping through its brutal encounters.
An image showing a landscape in Bleak Faith: Forsaken.
Bottom line: Grab the sale if you’re ready for a tough, atmospheric RPG and can tolerate a few rough edges.
Sources: Steam Store page, SteamDB price history.

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