Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

Conan Exiles brings open-world survival to the Barbarian’s world

Add as a preferred source on Google

The open-world multiplayer survival genre has certainly been booming lately, with games like DayZ pitting friends against each other in the fight to simply stay alive. But if you want something a little more … barbaric, Conan Exiles looks like the answer.

Developed by Funcom, the studio behind the recent atmospheric horror game The Park, Conan Exiles cast you as “one of thousands” of exiles sent into the brutal, over-the-top universe of Conan the Barbarian. As with other survival games, it will include hunting, harvesting, and shelter-building elements, but the developer also promises “savage, fast-paced combat” that will feature substantial amounts of gore.

Recommended Videos

While Funcom says that Conan Exiles “will also feature a single-player mode,” it’s primarily meant as a multiplayer game, and the lack of actual specifics on what the solo option contains suggests that it may be a tacked-on feature. If you’re more interested in a single-player Conan experience, the 2007 video game is a decent option. It didn’t score the best with reviewers (I played it myself, and found it slightly too campy, even for Conan), but it certainly doesn’t skimp on the crazy combat and fountains of blood.

This is certainly a huge departure from The Park, which focused on condensing scares into a shorter experience, in a similar vein to games like Amnesia.

“The fight for survival in Conan’s savage world has been chronicled in comics, movies, and novels,” says Conan Properties CEO Fredrik Malmberg in the announcement, “and now you too will get to experience the same struggle to achieve domination over the exiled lands.”

Conan Exiles arrives to PC in an early access form this summer before launching on both PC and consoles at an unspecified date. Let’s just hope both Exiles and The Legend of Conan film turn out better than some of the franchises’ recent installments.

Gabe Gurwin
Gabe Gurwin has been playing games since 1997, beginning with the N64 and the Super Nintendo. He began his journalism career…
Corsair fitted the Elgato Stream Deck’s soul into a hotkey on its Nightsword v2 mouse
Stream Deck macros, Discord controls, and app shortcuts move to the mouse
Corsair NIGHTSWORD v2 Wireless Stream Deck gaming mouse side view

Corsair has launched the Nightsword v2 Wireless SD Stream Deck gaming mouse, a right-handed wireless mouse with a dedicated Stream Deck launch button, at Computex 2026.

The Stream Deck support is an in-house integration rather than a third-party collaboration, since Corsair owns Elgato. It brings Elgato’s shortcut system directly to the mouse, letting gamers, streamers, and creators trigger app, gaming, and workflow controls without reaching for a separate desktop panel.

Read more
Nvidia confirms more RTX Spark processors are coming with N2X and N3 series lined up
Huang confirming a multi-generation roadmap before the first device has even shipped is the clearest signal yet that this is a decade-long commitment.
nvidia-rtx-spark

The PC and laptop industry has run on Intel and AMD silicon so long that most people don’t even question whether these are the only options. 

Nvidia just answered that question at Computex 2026, in the form of the RTX Spark superchip, and Jensen Huang’s comments about what comes next suggest that it wasn’t a one-time experiment. 

Read more
Nintendo is redesigning the Switch 2 so you can replace the battery yourself
An EU regulation taking effect in 2027 requires portable game consoles to support user-replaceable batteries, and Nintendo is already preparing a compliant version of the Switch 2.
Nintendo Switch 2

Nintendo plans to release a modified Switch 2 in Europe that will let you swap out the battery without sending the console in for service. The move is a direct response to a new EU regulation set to take effect in February 2027, which requires portable electronics, including game consoles, to support user-replaceable batteries.

Why this is a bigger deal than it sounds

Read more