Trail markers
Hand-painted route markers emerge from the undergrowth.
A peaceful first-person outdoor adventure
Explore a Bavarian-inspired wilderness with map and compass, observe and document nature, and settle in beside the fire. Forestbound brings the rituals of trekking and light survival into a calm journey without combat or pressure.
About Forestbound
In Forestbound, survival is not about fighting the world. It is about preparing well, reading the land, and taking care of yourself as you travel.
Choose your route, navigate by topographic map and compass, watch the weather, and make camp when you are ready. There are no enemies, no combat, and no race against the clock - only a landscape to understand at your own pace.
Forestbound glimpses
Hand-painted route markers emerge from the undergrowth.
Filtered light beneath a high, quiet canopy.
A small trailhead at the edge of the forest.
Weathered trees mark a forest in transition.
A distant landmark inspired by German telecommunications towers of the 1960s and 1970s.
Landscape views
The map is part of the game, not just the UI.
Hand-crafted topographic maps mirror the terrain as closely as possible, with contours, paths, water, vegetation, and landmarks you can also read in the world. Navigation knowledge learned here should feel useful beyond the screen.
Evening settles between the trees.
Warm sunset light, layered silhouettes, and the feeling of being alone with the forest.
Part of the journey leads through protected forest.
Dense woods open into wide views, quiet clearings, and national-park landscapes shaped by nature rather than roads.
Not every forest feels the same.
Move through pine stands, birch groves, deadwood areas, clearings, wetlands, dense spruce forest, and other distinct natural zones - each with its own mood, materials, and wayfinding clues.
Core features
Plan your route, move through varied terrain, and create a place to rest with shelter, warmth, food, and a fire.
Set in 1996, Forestbound keeps navigation analog: read a topographic map, take compass bearings, and use terrain, paths, and landmarks to find your own way.
Weather, temperature, hunger, and thirst shape the journey without dominating it or turning mistakes into harsh punishment.
Observe plants, wildlife, and natural materials to expand your field guide and deepen your understanding of the forest.
Capture wildlife, landscapes, and fleeting moments, then collect your photos, notes, and stickers in a personal nature journal.
Pitch your tent, light a campfire, prepare food, and let the day fade out in the wild.
Stay close
Receive occasional development notes, behind-the-scenes work, playtest news, and major announcements. No noise - only meaningful progress from the forest.