Dwarf Fortress — the hugely influential, dizzyingly expansive colony sim that's been in development for over 20 years — has just released its roguelike Adventure Mode over on Steam, albeit initially in public beta form.
Adventure Mode gives players an alternative way of exploring Dwarf Fortress' ludicrously in-depth, procedurally generated worlds — specifically in the form of a roguelike RPG, complete with procedural quests, NPCs, and turn-based battles.
It's a component of Dwarf Fortress that's been in the free ASCII version for years, but when the game made the jump to Steam in 2022 — as a paid release, complete with sprite-based visuals, a mouse-driven UI, and Steam Workshop compatibility — Adventure Mode wasn't included, although developer siblings Zach and Tarn Adams were clear it would eventually arrive.
Dwarf Fortress- Adventure Mode Beta Trailer Dwarf Fortress- Adventure Mode beta trailer.Watch on YouTubeAnd now, with a big chunk of development work complete — adding everything from procedurally generated sprite portraits to environment-appropriate ambient sounds — Adventure Mode is finally available to all Dwarf Fortress players on Steam, albeit as a beta release while work continues.
To access the beta, owners simply need to right-click Dwarf Fortress in their Steam library then go to Properties > Betas. From there, choose «beta — Public beta branch» from the dropdown list, and Steam should automatically begin downloading the Adventure Mode beta, no password required.
Existing Dwarf Fortress save files are compatible with the update, meaning your Adventure Mode party of explorers can visit any previous dwarven homesteads you might have made, but — as per a post on the Adams brothers' website — while there are «lots of good bits» to the beta, there are «some missing bits as well». Here's a 'non-exhaustive' list of things still to be implemented prior to Adventure Mode's full Steam release: