A boat floating in a river in Vintage Story
Image via Anego Studios

Survival games with the best crafting systems

I'm here to fight zombies and craft bandages, and I'm all out of zombies.

To a certain crowd, survival and crafting are almost synonymous with each other. For a long while, possibly due to Minecraft’s success, 🌳in-depth crafting systems were always accompanied 🧸by some survival elements. However, that is no longer the case.

Recommended Videos

Some of the most complex and compelling crafting games ever made, like Factorio and its first expansion, feature almost no combat and survival at all.🍷 That said, it’s also true that nothing makes brewing a good cup of coffee as intense as the post-apocalypse or Half-Life-inspired alien invaders. If you’re looking for this oddly specific 🐬thrill, you want a survival crafting game.

1# – Don’t Starve

Walani from Don't Starve Shipwreck surfing next to a sea monster
Image via Klei Entertainment

Even though it’s approaching its twelfth anniversary, this ugly-cute, roguelite survival game comes with depth that would make most modern competitors envious. It certainly helps that, in the years since its release, Don’t Starve has received a wealth of updates, expansions, and DLCs, the last of which was a crossover with 2023’s Cult of the Lamb.

Don’t Starve isn’t focused on telling a story, but as far as survival games go, it does a pretty good job of it. It even integrates its backstory with the description of craf🍌table items, which are tied to game progression, and with the various characters’ reactions to them. The more talkative and interesting characters are unlo🉐cked later in the game, just as the most curious items are only available during the late game.

#2 – 7 Days to Die

Looking at a street full of zombies while holding a gun in 7 Days To Die.
Image via The Fun Pimps

A classic survival crafting game that helped popularize the genre in the early 2010s, 7 Days to Die is as divisive now as it was 10 years ago. Over 10 years in early access did not manifest in a stable, bug-free 2024 1.0 editi🍨on, but it helped create a crafting system that is tied to game progression withoutᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚ being too linear.

What you can and can’t craft in 7 Days to Die, as well as the quality of what you will create is tied to your crafting skills. However, unlike ability scores and perks that increase when 🔯leveling up through normal play, crafting skills only improve when reading the appropriate magazines found in the game world.

#3 – Core Keeper

A player house in Core Keeper with a small farm next dor.
Image via Fireshine Games

Core Keeper’s early access period was short lived but managed to create a unique, creative, and – most importantly – complete game that stands out eveꦜn in the crowded genre of survival games with crafting mechanics. It does so in part with a classic but extensive tier-based crafting system, and in part with multiplayer co-op up to eight players, but the biggest selling point is probably its unique setting.

Lots of games in the genre feature mines and dungeons, so lengthy resource-gathering sessions have to take place in a dangerous environment. Core Keeper goes one step further and✱ sets the whole game in an inhabited cave system which players are encouraged to mine through and make their own.

4# – Project Zomboid

The protagonist repairing a purple van in a garage in Project Zomboid
Image via The Indie Stone

Project Zomboid is a lot of things, but it’s not what most players imagine when they think of a survival crafting game. But don’t let appearances fool you. Even if it looks like a city management game from the early 2000s, Project Zomboid is one of the most in-depth and open-eꦑnded survival games out there. And with the right mods, it can also be a management game.

If you ever want to be intimidated by a game, just take a look at the (incomplete) in Project Zomboid, which has more categories than some games have items. But while crafting is a big part of this game, looking at this massive list can’t even begin to explain how much there is to do. You can build a house from scratch. Starting from the B42 Project Zomboid patch, you can run your own farm. You can no longer be killed by a tree but hey, no game is perfect.

5# – Empyrion – Galactic Survival

A player base inside a spaceship in Empyrion - Galactic Survival
Image via Eleon Game Studios

Some survival games try to stand out by having an original storyline. Many go all-in on a unique mechanic or a weird design quirk. Others, like Empyrion – Galactic Survival, are very, very big. While it’s nominally a survival game, Empyrion is also a shooter action RPG, a ship/settlement/anything bu🀅ilder, and a spaceꦺ exploration flight sim.

If that isn’t enough, Empyrion comes with a massive crafting system and extensive mod support to add even more possibilities. And while it’s not as complex as software engineering simulator Factorio, there is some automa𓃲tion to make the most tedious aspects of resource gathering go by smoot♔her.

6# – Abiotic Factor

The protagonist and two co-op players drinking coffee on a snowy mountain
Image via Playstack

Abiotic Factor begins its life as a mix of Lethal Company’s sense of humor with a healthy dose of Half-Life references. The highly unstable concoction is then trapped in a survival game with story progression until the chaotic energy of six play♛er co-op increases pressure and leads the mixture to break containment. It’s pretty fun!

The first of Abiotic Factor’s many twists is that the protagonists are scientists in a top-secret research facility. While they don’t have the inexpl𓃲icable survivor instinct of a classic 💫survival game protagonist, they’re pretty good at building makeshift batteries and overclocked laser pointers. Things only get weirder once they get their hands on alien technology and objects of unspeakable evil.

#7 – Subnautica

A large underwater player base in Subnautica.
Image via Unknown Worlds Entertainment

Subnautica is one of the most popular survival ga🉐mes of the last few years, and for good reasons. In a genre full of cannibal islands🅷 and zombie apocalypses, crash landing in the middle of an alien ocean is a refreshing setup, while de-emphasized combat makes for a unique gameplay rhythm. The slow drip of story beats certainly helps, too.

However, what attracted hund🦩reds of thousands of players is almost certainly the crafting and especially base building. Lots of survival games have crafting recipes written down in a wiki, but how many have a fan-made ?

8# – Vintage Story

Two players walking in the wilderness in Vintage Story during the day.
Image via Anego Studios

Originally based on a Minecraft mod, Vintage Story is sure to be familiar to anyone who ever fell into the rabbit hole of hardcore Minecraft crafting. Yet, unlike that game, creating an item here isn’t just a matter of having the ingredients and knowing the recipe. Making an axe in Minecraft means drawing the right shape with the right materials. In Vintage Story, an axe is made through knapping.

What’s knapping? Why, it’s the most ancient form of stone crafting, which involves smashing a durable rock on a sharp but fragile rock. Take off the right shape, stick it on a stick, and you have your stone age axe. Not every bit of crafting is as involved, but pottery and smithing are just as complex, if not more, than knapping, making Vintage Story one 🎶of the best survival games out there when it comes to crafting.


Destructoid is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more about our Affiliate Policy
Author