Siege Survival: Gloria Victis – Brutal medieval strategy now $2.50 on Steam
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Siege Survival: Gloria Victis – Brutal medieval strategy now $2.50 on Steam

Laptops Reporter
3 min read

The indie title puts you in charge of a besieged civilian camp, forcing hard resource decisions. With a 90 % discount, Steam Deck support, and mixed reviews, we break down what the game offers, how it stacks up against similar titles, and who should consider buying it.

What’s new

  • Price drop: Steam now lists Siege Survival: Gloria Victim at $2.50, a 90 % discount from its regular $25 price. The deal matches the lowest price ever recorded on SteamDB.
  • Steam Deck compatibility: The store marks the game as Playable on the Deck, meaning you can run the full experience on the handheld.
  • New visibility: A recent update to the store page adds a short trailer and a higher‑resolution screenshot, giving a clearer look at the day‑night cycle that defines the gameplay.

Featured image

How it compares

Feature Siege Survival This War of Mine Typical medieval strategy titles
Setting Besieged medieval city, civilian camp Modern war‑torn city Castle‑building, large armies
Core loop Day‑time resource management + night‑time scavenging Day‑time shelter building + night‑time raids Build‑and‑conquer macro‑scale battles
Graphics Low‑poly, functional, dated textures Stylised 2‑D art High‑poly 3‑D engines
Replay value Limited – same map, few random events Moderate – random survivor traits High – map editors, mod support
Price $2.50 (90 % off) $14.99 (full price) $30‑$60

The game’s design mirrors the tension of This War of Mine but swaps modern urban decay for a stone‑walled siege. During daylight you manage a cramped camp: cooking, crafting arrows, treating wounds, and allocating food between soldiers and civilians. Nightfall flips the focus to stealth raids through ruined streets, where each successful foraging run can keep the camp afloat.

Performance and hardware notes

  • CPU: The game runs comfortably on a dual‑core i5‑8250U or AMD Ryzen 5 3500U, which are common in mid‑range laptops.
  • GPU: Integrated graphics (Intel UHD 620, AMD Vega 8) are sufficient for 1080p at 30 fps with low settings. Turning off shadows and reducing texture quality eliminates occasional stutter on older chips.
  • RAM: 4 GB is the minimum listed, but 8 GB provides a smoother experience, especially when the night‑time scavenging AI spawns multiple guards.
  • Steam Deck: The game launches in the Deck’s Desktop Mode and runs at 30 fps on the default 800p resolution. Battery life hovers around 2 hours of continuous night‑time raids, which is typical for indie titles with modest graphics.

Who it’s for

Player type Why it fits
Hard‑core survival fans The constant scarcity forces you to make moral choices—feed the soldiers or the civilians, risk a raid for a single bundle of arrows, or accept a slow decline.
Fans of narrative‑driven strategy The game’s text‑based events and occasional voice‑overs create a bleak but immersive story without requiring a massive budget.
Steam Deck owners on a budget At $2.50 the title is a low‑risk experiment for handheld gaming; the performance ceiling is well within the Deck’s capabilities.
Players seeking replay depth Those who need long‑term variety may be disappointed; the map is static and the event pool is limited, so the experience is best treated as a short‑term challenge rather than a marathon.

Verdict

Siege Survival: Gloria Victis delivers a tight, morally charged loop that will appeal to anyone who enjoys managing scarce resources under pressure. The graphics are undeniably dated, and the single‑map design limits long‑term replay, but the $2.50 price point makes those shortcomings easy to forgive. If you own a Steam Deck or have a modest laptop and want a quick, tense strategy session, the discount makes it a worthwhile purchase. For players who demand extensive content or high‑fidelity visuals, you might look elsewhere.


Sources: Steam store page, SteamDB price history, Metacritic summary

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