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Frostpunk 2 trades the furnace for a parliament — and I miss the furnace

The sequel zooms out from survival to politics. Ambitious, colder, and not always in the way it wants to be.

Frostpunk 2 trades the furnace for a parliament — and I miss the furnace

The first Frostpunk was about a furnace and the people freezing around it. Every law you passed had a face attached. Frostpunk 2 is about a city of hundreds of thousands and the factions arguing over what it should become — and in scaling up, it has scaled away some of the thing that made the first one unforgettable.

That's the review in one sentence, but it's not the whole story, because what 11 bit built instead is genuinely interesting. You're not placing individual workshops anymore; you're zoning districts, steering a council, and trying to keep a fragile coalition from fracturing while the cold does what the cold does.

Politics as the new weather

The smartest move is making your factions persistent political actors. The Stalwarts remember that you sided against them two crises ago. Promise the Foragers one thing to pass a law and renege, and you'll feel it at the next vote. It turns governance into a long game of debts and favours, and at its best it produces the agonising trade-offs the series is known for — just in a council chamber instead of a generator room.

When it works, it really works. There's a midgame stretch where I had to choose between a law that would feed everyone and one that would keep my coalition intact, and I sat there for a genuine two minutes. That's Frostpunk.

The council chamber is where the real survival happens now. (Screenshot placeholder)

What got lost in the zoom-out

At this altitude, individuals become numbers. The first game could ruin your day with a single sick child; the sequel ruins your day with a polling slump. It's more sophisticated and less human, and I felt the difference in my stomach. The opening hours don't help — the first three or four are essentially a tutorial wearing a trench coat, lecturing you through menus before the actual game shows up.

Stick with it, though. Around the time the second faction crisis hits, the systems lock into place and the dread comes back — colder, more abstract, but recognisably the same series asking the same cruel question: what will you do to survive, and who pays for it?

It's a smarter game than its predecessor and a less devastating one. I'm still not sure that's a trade I'd have made.

Builders who want a fresh political layer should absolutely play it. Just know going in that the furnace is gone, and a spreadsheet of human beings has taken its place — which, depending on who you are, is either the point or the loss.

8/10verdict
Plus

A genuinely fresh take on the survival-builder; factions that scheme and remember.

Minus

Loses the intimate desperation of the first game; the early hours are a UI lecture.

Reader rating
4.1/ 5
based on 241 ratings
5 ★44%
4 ★33%
3 ★14%
2 ★5%
1 ★4%
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Comments (5)

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T
the_council_knows16 May 2026

"a tutorial wearing a trench coat" got me. the first three hours are genuinely a slog and I almost refunded before it clicked.

C
coal_and_consequence16 May 2026

I actually prefer the political layer? the first game's child-died popups felt manipulative after a while. this is colder but more honest.

C
captain_obvious_217 May 2026

8/10 is fair. it's more game and less gut-punch. miss when one law had one face though.

TM
Theo Marchetti (author)17 May 2026

That's the exact tension I couldn't resolve. More game, less gut. Some nights I want the gut.

F
frostbitten_fern18 May 2026

the foragers remembered I lied to them and tanked my next three votes. genuinely felt bad. the grudge system is the best part.

T
two_degrees19 May 2026

give it the patches. first game was rough at launch too and became a classic. the bones are here.

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