Cult of the Wind was a Greenlight darling, but no one is playing it

Cult of the Wind

Cult of the Wind stormed through Steam Greenlight on the back of a childhood memory: running around making airplane noises, outstretched arms smacking into anything foolish enough to get in the way of a pretend Spitfire (sorry, my sister). Its multiplayer "human dogfights" looked like silly fun in the trailer, and now that it's out, I'm down for some childhood regression if anyone else is. So, is anyone? No?

I'd love to know whether or not Cult of the Wind succeeds at all the silliness that got it through Greenlight , but no one is playing it. It left Early Access a couple weeks ago, and it's completely empty—there's only one dedicated server running, and I haven't seen anyone in it yet today. I even sat in the server for an hour, hoping to entice someone to join me, but no one came.

There are no bots, so unless Cult of the Wind finds a population, you'd be better off running around shooting 'pew pew pews' in the direction of neighborhood cats. There are lots of graphics options, a simple character customization system, and a great little level editor included, but I can't play (or review) Cult of the Wind unless someone else joins that lonely official server or makes a new one. For now, I'll just have to score it an 'oh dear' out of 'well that's too bad, isn't it?' It might be fun with friends, but who's going to convince their friends to buy a game without actually playing it first?

I contacted developer North of Earth to ask what it might have done differently, or what it will do now to get more players playing—Cult of the Wind had lots of buzz on Greenlight, so what happened? There's no word back at the time of writing, but according to a developer update on Steam , Cult of the Wind is still being updated and is currently in "Beta 4" despite its exit from Early Access . [Correction: Cult of the Wind is out of beta now, version 1.0.]

Even if it's still in development, I'll be surprised if Cult of the Wind can be saved. If it were free, I'd suggest that players might trickle in until the word-of-mouth snowball starts rolling, or at least until it earns a small, dedicated community. At its current price ($15/£11), and without a stable population after more than two weeks, I have much less hope. PC gaming is an odd, tough world when more people are playing Quake II than a game resoundingly voted onto Steam just a few months ago.

Tyler Wilde
Executive Editor

Tyler grew up in Silicon Valley during the '80s and '90s, playing games like Zork and Arkanoid on early PCs. He was later captivated by Myst, SimCity, Civilization, Command & Conquer, all the shooters they call "boomer shooters" now, and PS1 classic Bushido Blade (that's right: he had Bleem!). Tyler joined PC Gamer in 2011, and today he's focused on the site's news coverage. His hobbies include amateur boxing and adding to his 1,200-plus hours in Rocket League.