Road to Vostok, a “hardcore” single-player survival shooter praised by some as a solo spin on the likes of Escape from Tarkov, launched on Steam in Early Access this week on Tuesday, April 7. Made and published by Finland-based studio Road to Vostok Ltd. – which is really solo dev Antti Leionen, who’s been at this for four years and who was clearly betting the farm on this title – the game caught fire like dry brush, rocketing to, at the time of writing, seventh place on Steam’s global top seller charts. That puts it above Slay the Spire 2 and close behind Crimson Desert, two of the biggest new games of 2026.
Very directly called “single player Tarkov” in a review from Steam user Wedge (and many other reviews), Road to Vostok is a post-apocalyptic shooter set in the border between Finland and Russia. “Survive, loot, plan and prepare to cross the border into Vostok, a permadeath zone where one mistake can end it all,” the developer advises.
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Interestingly, the Steam blurb adds: “Road to Vostok is a hardcore survival game, but it doesn’t force you into specific playstyles. You are not forced to enter the permadeath zone, you don’t have to care about the lore, and your character isn’t tied to any specific role or theme.”

So, you can see where the Escape from Tarkov comparisons – not to mention parallels to Rust, DayZ, and other games in this space – have come from. The kicker, of course, is that Road to Vostok is just for you, and it turns out that a single-player, more Stalker-y version of the biggest survival shooters around can absolutely pop off on Steam, especially when it’s only $15 with a launch discount (through April 21).
In a Twitter post discussing the launch, Vostok’s developer says, “The past 24 hours have been absolutely insane.”
“Road to Vostok is currently Top Seller in many countries, front page on Steam and with Very Positive rating,” they add. “I will share some launch stats when I have gathered enough data (+ some sleep), but I can already say that the launch has been extremely successful for a solo dev and secured the entire production budget for this game for years and years to come. Thank you!”
You can’t ask for much more than instantaneously recouping your entire production budget and simultaneously funding the game for years to come.
Road to Vostok is described as a “long-term project” in its Steam Early Access blurb, scheduled to stay in Early Access for “approximately 2 – 4 years” before full release. The 1.0 version of the game is targeting roughly double the “amount of content and features,” from maps and traders to weapons and items. The price will rise as the game is expanded, the dev says.
There’s a free demo available on Steam if you’re still on the fence. Currently, Road to Vostok holds an 82% positive score across 1,220 Steam reviews.
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In a 22-minute video marking the launch, Leionen explains his military background, touches on the long journey to Early Access, and sets expectations for what’s to come. He affirms that the game focuses on real-world locations with an emphasis on southeast Finland, “where I personally grew up as a kid.” Much of the video is just Leionen chatting in the snow. It’s cut together with gameplay footage, but I’m honestly most interested in the snowside discussion.
“Should you buy this game? Should you trust me as a developer? Should you trust one of these Early Access survival games?” Leionen asks. “Considering past, quite shady projects in this genre. But I’m going to make a small sales pitch, if you will, why Road to Vostok isn’t just another survival game.”
The first point of his pitch is this: “I think that the game is pretty cool.”
Well I’m sold.
More seriously, Leionen says he “gave away” the “lifetime financial security” of a military officer career because “this is my true passion. I’m not interested in doing any other games in my career. I’m solely going to focus on Road to Vostok.”
Leionen notes that he deliberately turned down all publisher and investor deals to preserve his independence: “There’s no publishers, there’s no revenue share deals, there’s no investors, there’s no loans. I own everything 100%. This means that if this game makes some money, I can put all the potential game revenue back into development.”
Yeah, I would say it’s made some money.
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