Planar Conquest
Charts
8

Players in Game

325 😀     210 😒
59,13%

Rating

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$0.99

Planar Conquest Reviews

Become an all-powerful Sorcerer Lord and lead one of 8 different races to the ultimate victory. Explore multiple planes of existence, raid dungeons, and conquer cities. Expand your armies, cast mighty spells, and summon godly creatures to do your bidding. Fight the enemies in D20 OGL battles.
App ID449300
App TypeGAME
Developers
Publishers Conglomerate 5
Categories Single-player, Steam Achievements, Steam Cloud, Steam Trading Cards
Genres Indie, Strategy, Simulation, RPG
Release Date30 May, 2016
Platforms Windows, Mac, Linux
Supported Languages English, French, German, Spanish - Spain, Russian, Polish

Planar Conquest
535 Total Reviews
325 Positive Reviews
210 Negative Reviews
Mixed Score

Planar Conquest has garnered a total of 535 reviews, with 325 positive reviews and 210 negative reviews, resulting in a ‘Mixed’ overall score.

Reviews Chart


Chart above illustrates the trend of feedback for Planar Conquest over time, showcasing the dynamic changes in player opinions as new updates and features have been introduced. This visual representation helps to understand the game's reception and how it has evolved.


Recent Steam Reviews

This section displays the 10 most recent Steam reviews for the game, showcasing a mix of player experiences and sentiments. Each review summary includes the total playtime along with the number of thumbs-up and thumbs-down reactions, clearly indicating the community's feedback

Playtime: 95 minutes
-rep
👍 : 0 | 😃 : 0
Negative
Playtime: 1568 minutes
Planar Conquest is a turn-based 4X strategy game set in a fantasy universe filled with magical realms, rival sorcerer lords, and sprawling planar maps. Drawing heavy inspiration from genre classics like Master of Magic, it promises deep spellcasting systems, customizable factions, and tactical combat. On paper, it’s an impressive offering—multiple races, hundreds of spells, multi-plane exploration—but the execution often struggles to deliver on the promise. From the very beginning, the game shows ambition, allowing you to craft your own wizard, choose spell schools, and build an empire across parallel dimensions. The premise is engaging, but what unfolds can feel more overwhelming than empowering. As the game begins, you find yourself managing a city, constructing buildings, raising armies, and researching spells, all while preparing for inevitable conflict with rival mages. It follows the familiar “explore, expand, exploit, and exterminate” formula. There’s depth in the options—unit types, city development paths, planar gateways—but much of it feels underdeveloped. The AI is particularly erratic, frequently declaring war without clear cause and struggling with basic decision-making. Diplomacy feels more like a checkbox feature than a strategic layer, and alliances often collapse into unavoidable conflict regardless of your choices. Managing multiple planes adds scale, but the maps and their inhabitants begin to feel repetitive after a few hours. The tactical battles take place on a separate grid and allow for direct control of units, but the system lacks nuance. Positioning and unit variety theoretically offer room for strategy, yet most encounters are determined by sheer numbers and brute strength. Auto-resolve is unreliable, and the interface during combat is clunky, with little feedback or clarity. Spells, while diverse and powerful, often end up being spammed rather than tactically deployed, simply because the UI makes it difficult to manage finer details. Over time, the combat loop becomes more of a chore than a compelling challenge. One of the game’s biggest drawbacks is its presentation and interface. Graphically, Planar Conquest looks dated, with static textures, minimal animation, and generic art assets that do little to immerse the player. The menus are cumbersome, the font is small and hard to read in some versions, and basic actions like adjusting production queues or navigating between cities require more clicks than they should. Tutorials are minimal, and for new players especially, the learning curve feels steep—not because of game complexity, but because of a lack of clear instruction or modern quality-of-life design. Despite these issues, the game does have moments of genuine enjoyment. As you expand across different planes, build up your empire, and unlock higher-tier spells, there’s a steady sense of progression. If you enjoy tinkering with faction builds, creating unique spell combinations, or micromanaging cities and units, there’s some satisfaction to be found. The sheer volume of options—whether in hero traits, unit upgrades, or planar travel—can make each campaign feel distinct, at least for the first few hours. But the cracks begin to show when those systems lack the strategic weight or polish to hold long-term engagement. Stability and performance are also frequent concerns. On some platforms, players have reported crashes, corrupted saves, and bugs that halt progress entirely. These technical issues, combined with inconsistent UI feedback and slow AI turns, can seriously undermine the player experience. While patches and updates have addressed some of these problems, the overall sense is that Planar Conquest is still rough around the edges and not as refined as its inspirations. In the end, Planar Conquest feels like a game with grand ideas but limited follow-through. It’s clearly built with passion and a love for classic 4X mechanics, and for players who are willing to push through its rough spots, it can offer a satisfying strategic sandbox. However, the lack of polish, cumbersome interface, and repetitive gameplay loops hold it back from being a must-play in the genre. It’s a game for enthusiasts with patience—those looking to relive a bit of retro fantasy strategy without expecting the depth or fluidity of modern counterparts. Rating: 6/10
👍 : 2 | 😃 : 0
Positive
Playtime: 11072 minutes
its a decent game some what unbalanced but its worth the money for sure
👍 : 1 | 😃 : 0
Positive
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