
What are the best RTS games? Few things are as satisfying as building up an immense army and simply washing over your foes like a river over stones, erasing their existence as effortlessly as a click. As one of the classic PC genres, real-time strategy games require forward planning in a slow and realistic time period, giving you the chance to make the best – or most diabolical – decisions possible.
Starcraft and Age of Empires largely define the genre and are some of the best PC games out there, but indie games like Northgard and Driftland have shown that plenty of other voices can be heard. The rise of MOBAs has challenged the RTS scene significantly over the past decade, but this hasn’t stopped some worthy games from rising to the top ranks to earn their place in the Hall of Fame. Here’s our take on the best RTS games on PC.
The best RTS games on PC are:
Frostpunk 2
These games don’t all have to be about military war; Frostpunk and its sequel, Frostpunk 2, are perfect examples of that. It’s debatable whether Frostpunk 2 is technically an RTS game as you can pause the timeline for more difficult decisions, but overall, it still has the essential feel of a real-time strategy game: time constantly passes, and all the while, your colonists and environment are acting and evolving.
Frostpunk 2 upped the game from Frostpunk, as you can read about in our Frostpunk 2 review, in that it expands the area far further than the first game, encourages you to build multiple colonies, and introduces a council hall voting system alongside your warring factions. The real-time elements come in hot here as the council meets to vote every few weeks, and your decisions affect your relations with your factions – and their relations with one another. Meanwhile, while the council is closed, you might have promises to keep and bills to pass, but you just have to wait until your council members are due to meet again.
Total War: Warhammer 3
The battles are as epic as you remember, and the broad range of units on display makes for a visual feast. Total War: Warhammer 3 doesn’t require any previous knowledge of the series or the broader Warhammer universe to enjoy – in fact, the constant surprises you might get by knowing nothing may be worth the price of entry alone.