Softonic’s piece on Brendan Greene confirming the end of his open-world survival project at PlayerUnknown Productions sent a wave of survival genre fans looking for what to play in the meantime. The market has matured since the early DayZ and Rust years. Modern survival games sit on real engines, support clean multiplayer, and have lost most of the bugs that defined the early-access era. The picks now divide on tone: Viking myth, post-apocalyptic chaos, dinosaur extinction, claustrophobic island horror, slower colony building.
We tested 7 of the best open-world survival games on a current Windows machine for the multiplayer titles, with macOS and Linux checked through Proton or native builds where the game supports them. The benchmark was a survival-game-specific one: how long the early hours of “find food, find shelter, find a weapon” stays interesting, how the late game scales when a server has 10 players or 50, and whether the world rewards exploration the way the genre promises.
What to look for in an open-world survival game
- A real food and water loop. Surviving needs to mean something. Games that skip the basics quickly turn into action games with a crafting menu.
- A meaningful biome map. The world should reward exploration with materials, monsters, or shelter the player cannot find at base.
- Stable multiplayer. Solo play is fine; the genre’s best moments happen with friends on a dedicated server.
- A crafting tree that pays off. Tools, weapons, structures, vehicles, all gated through resources the player can actually plan toward.
- Death stakes. Permanent or near-permanent consequences for dying keep the early hours honest. Games that respawn the player too kindly stop being survival games quickly.
- Mod and server support. The longest-lived survival games are the ones with a real modding community.
Quick comparison
| Game | Best for | Platforms | Free plan | Standout feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Valheim | Viking myth co-op with smooth progression | Windows, Linux | No (one-time purchase, Early Access) | Procedural worlds with a curated biome rhythm |
| Rust | Hardcore multiplayer with PvP | Windows, macOS | No (one-time purchase) | The largest competitive survival community on PC |
| ARK: Survival Ascended | Dinosaurs and Unreal 5 visuals | Windows | No (one-time purchase) | The dino taming and breeding system the genre is built around |
| The Forest | Island horror with cannibal mutants | Windows | No (one-time purchase) | Tight crafting loop with a horror antagonist |
| 7 Days to Die | Voxel destruction and the seventh-day horde | Windows, macOS, Linux | No (one-time purchase) | Voxel terrain and structure building with horde-defence stakes |
| Conan Exiles | Sword-and-sorcery base building | Windows | No (one-time purchase) | Largest building system in the genre |
| Don’t Starve Together | Co-op hand-drawn survival with permadeath | Windows, macOS, Linux | No (one-time purchase) | Sanity meter and permanent character death |
| Subnautica | Single-player ocean survival horror | Windows, macOS, Linux | No (one-time purchase) | A planet-sized ocean with an emergent story |
The 8 best open-world survival games on desktop
1. Valheim — best Viking-myth co-op
Valheim is the cleanest entry to the genre for new survival players in 2026. Iron Gate’s procedural world generates a curated biome rhythm (meadows, black forest, swamp, mountain, plains, mistlands, ashlands) where each biome introduces new threats, materials, and bosses. The combat is more deliberate than the genre average, the building system is light enough that a small farm goes up quickly, and the co-op for 2-10 players is the smoothest in this list.
Where it falls short: Still Early Access at the time of writing, although stable. The visual style is intentionally low-fi and not everyone loves it. Some of the late biomes are long grinds.
Pricing:
- Free: none
- Paid: one-time purchase
Platforms: Windows, Linux
Download: store.steampowered.com/app/892970
Bottom line: Pick Valheim for open-world survival if you want a friendly entry to the genre with friends, and you do not mind low-fi visuals.
2. Rust — best hardcore PvP survival
Rust is the genre’s most competitive survival game and the one most likely to deliver the highest-highs and lowest-lows that fans of the early-DayZ era are looking for. Facepunch’s wipe schedule keeps the meta fresh, and the official community servers are typically full. The base-defence game, the raid game, and the gunplay are all serious; this is not a game to dip in for an hour.
Where it falls short: The PvP-only orientation excludes players who want a more peaceful survival experience. The wipe schedule resets progress on a regular cadence, which is the point but not for everyone.
Pricing:
- Free: none
- Paid: one-time purchase
Platforms: Windows, macOS
Download: store.steampowered.com/app/252490
Bottom line: Pick Rust for open-world survival if you want hardcore PvP and you are happy with the wipe cadence.
3. ARK: Survival Ascended — best for dinosaurs and Unreal 5
ARK: Survival Ascended is the Unreal 5 remaster of Survival Evolved, and it remains the dino-taming game the genre is built around. The taming system is still the deepest in the category, the breeding is genuinely elaborate, and the maps cover everything from tropical islands to the underground “Aberration” cavern. The Unreal 5 visuals are a real step up for players who liked the original but bounced off the dated graphics.
Where it falls short: Performance demands are heavy. The DLC strategy carries forward from the original ARK, which is divisive. Mods are still arriving on the remaster.
Pricing:
- Free: none
- Paid: one-time purchase
Platforms: Windows
Download: store.steampowered.com/app/2399830
Bottom line: Pick ARK: Survival Ascended for open-world survival if dinosaurs and a deep taming game are what you want.
4. The Forest (and Sons of the Forest) — best survival horror island
The Forest is the original Endnight game, and the sequel Sons of the Forest continues the formula. The hook is the cannibal-mutant antagonist that learns the player’s patterns, builds structures of its own, and turns the island into a real survival horror by night. The base-building, the crafting, and the cave-diving all support a longer arc than most survival horror games offer.
Where it falls short: Some of the systems are intentionally obtuse. Multiplayer is smaller than the asymmetric games in this list.
Pricing:
- Free: none
- Paid: one-time purchase per game
Platforms: Windows
Download: store.steampowered.com/app/242760 (Sons of the Forest is a separate purchase)
Bottom line: Pick The Forest (or Sons of the Forest) for open-world survival if you want a horror antagonist in your crafting loop.
5. 7 Days to Die — best for horde defence
7 Days to Die is the genre’s voxel terrain and base-defence game. The map is destructible, the crafting tree reaches into vehicles and electronics, and on the seventh in-game day a horde of infected attacks the base. The cycle of build, defend, repair, expand has kept the game in continuous play for a decade.
Where it falls short: The Early Access tag carried for longer than most. The graphics are dated even after recent updates. The horde mechanic is the highlight; players who don’t connect with the horde-night loop will tap out earlier.
Pricing:
- Free: none
- Paid: one-time purchase
Platforms: Windows, macOS, Linux
Download: store.steampowered.com/app/251570
Bottom line: Pick 7 Days to Die for open-world survival if you want voxel terrain and the horde-night defence loop.
6. Conan Exiles — best base-building game
Conan Exiles has the deepest building system of any survival game in this list. Funcom’s sandbox lets a player or a clan raise multi-tiered fortresses with thousands of placeable pieces, garrisoned with NPC servants captured from the wilds. The combat is action-RPG flavoured rather than survival-strict, and the world is the largest of the picks here.
Where it falls short: The combat divides players. Server quality and rule sets vary; finding the right official or private server is part of the experience.
Pricing:
- Free: none
- Paid: one-time purchase
Platforms: Windows
Download: store.steampowered.com/app/440900
Bottom line: Pick Conan Exiles for open-world survival if base building is the part of the genre you want to spend the most time on.
7. Don’t Starve Together — best hand-drawn co-op survival
Don’t Starve Together is the Klei classic and still the best entry for players who want survival with a stylised art direction and permadeath stakes. The sanity meter is unique to the franchise, the seasonal world keeps the loop fresh, and the co-op for up to six players is approachable for newcomers. The expansions add real depth without changing the core loop.
Where it falls short: The art direction is divisive. Death is permanent and that can frustrate new players. The 2D-ish perspective limits some genre conventions.
Pricing:
- Free: none
- Paid: one-time purchase
Platforms: Windows, macOS, Linux
Download: store.steampowered.com/app/322330
Bottom line: Pick Don’t Starve Together for open-world survival if you want a hand-drawn co-op and you are OK with permadeath.
8. Subnautica — best for single-player survival
Subnautica is the strongest single-player survival game on this list. The planet’s ocean is the world, the crafting tree builds steadily larger submarines, and the emergent story carries the player from a 50-metre shallow into the kilometres-deep dark. The horror moments are some of the best the genre has produced.
Where it falls short: Single-player only. The pacing is slow by design; players who want immediate action will tap out in the first hour.
Pricing:
- Free: none
- Paid: one-time purchase
Platforms: Windows, macOS, Linux
Download: store.steampowered.com/app/264710
Bottom line: Pick Subnautica for open-world survival if you want a single-player game in the genre and you can let the early hours breathe.
How to pick the right one
- If you want a friendly start with friends: Valheim.
- If you want hardcore PvP and a competitive server economy: Rust.
- If dinosaurs and taming are the draw: ARK: Survival Ascended.
- If you want a horror antagonist in your survival loop: The Forest or Sons of the Forest.
- If horde defence is the hook: 7 Days to Die.
- If base-building is the part you want to maximise: Conan Exiles.
- If you want a hand-drawn co-op with permadeath: Don’t Starve Together.
- If you want a single-player survival game with a real story: Subnautica.
FAQ
Are these games playable solo?
All of them are. Valheim, Conan Exiles, ARK: Survival Ascended, and 7 Days to Die all support a solo world. Subnautica is single-player only. Don’t Starve Together and Rust are designed around multiplayer but can run solo with the right settings.
Which open-world survival game is best for beginners?
Valheim. The biome progression curve is gentler than the rest of the genre, the building system is forgiving, and the co-op is the smoothest on this list.
What is the closest replacement for the PUBG-creator survival game?
Brendan Greene’s project was an MMO-scale open-world survival with a focus on persistent world dynamics. The closest commercial answers in 2026 are Rust (for the PvP-driven side) and Valheim or Conan Exiles (for the world-state side).
Do any of these games run on Linux?
Several have native Linux builds (Valheim, 7 Days to Die, Don’t Starve Together, Subnautica). The rest run cleanly through Proton on Steam Deck and most Linux distros.
Are open-world survival games still being made?
Yes. The wave that started with DayZ and Rust has settled into a steady cadence of releases, with Unreal 5 remasters (ARK) and recent additions (Sons of the Forest, Enshrouded, Once Human) keeping the genre alive. The next big survival project — whoever takes Brendan Greene’s mantle — is the wait every fan is on right now.