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ReviewsPC

Dune: Awakening Review

Maisie Scott
Maisie Scott
Published on June 9, 2025
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12 Min Read
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4.2

An Ambitious Survival Epic That Redefines the Dune Universe

Dune: Awakening rises from the dunes as a daring fusion of survival mechanics, MMO elements, and iconic science fiction lore. Drawing inspiration from the classic novels of Frank Herbert and bolstered by the visual style of recent cinematic adaptations, Dune: Awakening dares to reshape the way you interact with one of science fiction’s most storied universes.

Developed by Funcom, known for its work on Conan Exiles, the game reimagines the harsh desert world of Arrakis as a sprawling, multiplayer sandbox. The game seeks to bring both Dune diehards and survival genre enthusiasts into its brutal, sandworm-infested world.

Rather than directly adapting any book or movie, Dune: Awakening offers an alternate timeline in which Paul Atreides never existed. Instead, you assume the role of an exiled outcast struggling to survive and rise on Arrakis.

This change in the plot gives the developers the chance to combine ancient wisdom with contemporary ideas, giving them complete control over the creation and reconstruction of a planet that is in jeopardy.  By combining resource-based gameplay, emergent player storytelling, and narrative ambiguity, Funcom’s vision produces a harsh yet ambitious survival MMO.

Dune: Awakening, PC, Review, Gameplay, Screenshots, GamesCreed

In Dune: Awakening, you awaken as a nameless exile cast into the unforgiving Hagga Basin. With no hero’s journey written for you, the struggle becomes deeply personal, scratching out survival in a world where water is more valuable than gold and the air itself can kill.

The story unfolds through environmental cues, side quests, and faction-based missions rather than linear plotlines. Political implications are being reshaped by the absence of Paul Atreides, creating a vacuum of power that factions like House Atreides, House Harkonnen, Fremen, and the shadowy Bene Gesserit now struggle to fill.

As you advance through Acts I to IV, the story gets deeper in its cynicism. Early on, we see the ghosts of survival and adaptation. Now, with power sharing, new problems arise. Moral ambiguity, loyalty to a faction, and your decisions start to change not only your own outcomes but also Arrakis’s political landscape. There are different storylines for each House Faction.

The missions put Atreides’s idealism against Harkonnen’s cruelty, with the lines between honor, espionage, and betrayal becoming less clear. There are spiritual parts to this survivalist story. Hallucinogenic spice storms and visions from the Bene Gesserit connect you to more profound truths and altered states of consciousness, serving both as world-building tools and short minigames.

Each hallucination becomes a symbolic representation of the power struggles shaping Arrakis. The desert does not merely test your strength. It questions your convictions, erodes your ego, and redefines your purpose. By locking major story developments behind tiers of gameplay progression, Dune: Awakening ensures that narrative impact grows in proportion to your investment.

Dune: Awakening, PC, Review, Gameplay, Screenshots, GamesCreed

As the story expands into the Deep Desert and reveals the hidden war between factions, you become more than survivors. You become agents of systemic change, threading your own arc through the windswept fate of the planet.

At its core, Dune: Awakening is a sandbox survival MMO. You start with nothing but rags and quickly learn the first lesson of Arrakis: nothing is free. Scavenging for water, hunting for food, and avoiding heatstroke become your earliest routines. The game’s thirst and hunger systems force constant awareness, with hydration even harvested from enemy blood using Stillsuits and improvised devices.

Each minute in the sun is a gamble, each piece of shade a sanctuary. Moreover, the building system allows you to craft bases anchored to the planet’s rocky foundations. Placement matters; build on shifting sand, and the sandworms will devour your entire structure.

Resource gathering involves mining glowing rock veins using laser cutters, processing the chunks at refining stations, and unlocking schematic upgrades through crafting trees. You can specialize in different disciplines like Planetology or Mentat theory, each providing gameplay perks like faster resource conversion, toxin resistance, or enhanced vision in spice storms.

Traversal across the map can be arduous at first, but tools like grappling hooks and parachutes introduce a surprising verticality. Late-game unlocks include ornithopters and sandbikes, which open access to the Deep Desert and its dangerous riches. The gameplay loop encourages smart preparation, careful planning, and increasingly complex automation while blending personal exploration with faction-based cooperation.

Dune: Awakening, PC, Review, Gameplay, Screenshots, GamesCreed

With procedurally generated events, shifting enemy patrols, and even unpredictable weather conditions, no two gameplay sessions in Dune: Awakening feels alike. Whether soloing scavenger camps or coordinating a guild raid into a Harkonnen stronghold, every decision has weight.

Combat in Dune: Awakening is functional but uneven. Ranged combat borrows from third-person shooters with standard mechanics where you have to aim, reload, and shoot, but adds wrinkles through enemy shields and heat-based weapon behaviors. Shielded rivals must be overwhelmed with bullets or broken through with melee strikes. This dual system ensures encounters rarely devolve into mindless shooting.

On the other hand, because swinging weapons follow simple patterns, melee combat is unable to deal with subtleties. For example, heavy strike, parry, evade, and mild attack. Although the instrument functions properly, the movements are stiff, which makes close-up combat difficult. Clunky inputs frequently lead to irritation rather than challenge, even if boss bouts demand exact parry time.

Environmental hazards also play a role. Combat often unfolds amid sandstorms, where visibility drops and movement slows. Other than that, sandworms can interrupt a firefight, forcing retreats or sudden deaths. These dynamic variables might feel like they can inject excitement, but in reality, they can become very punishing for those who don’t know how to learn to adapt.

What works well is the game’s emphasis on adaptation. Every battle becomes a dance between your gear loadout, NPC behavior, and environmental conditions. Shields and elemental resistance add tactical choices, and the ranged weapon arsenal offers a variety of damage types. The introduction of spice-induced hallucinations and vision-based puzzles also adds a cerebral layer, blending light pattern-matching minigames into the flow.

Dune: Awakening, PC, Review, Gameplay, Screenshots, GamesCreed

In contrast, what drags the system down is the melee clunkiness and erratic AI. While higher-tier enemies like Hunter-Seekers behave with more tactical awareness, early enemies simply charge or bug out. Animations can misfire, and delayed input windows undercut the potential for refined timing. The combat, while competent, doesn’t quite match the polish of the game’s survival mechanics.

Progression in Dune: Awakening is measured through crafting trees, reputation systems, and level-based unlocks. Getting XP by completing faction tasks, making advanced tools, and making it through harsher areas unlocks new schematics and makes it easier to stay alive. You must be at least Level 40 to access higher-level content like PvP in the Deep Desert or the dungeons in the Imperial Labs. This makes the game more difficult to rush through because it takes a long time to level up.

In addition, this system rewards persistence. If you manage your resources efficiently and diversify, your skills can unlock advanced blueprints like Mk III Stillsuits or the Ornithopter Permit. Reputation with faction houses gained through contracts and diplomacy also unlocks exclusive perks like unique mounts or territory upgrades. Grinding is a mechanism that is linked to social connection, gameplay style, and numbers.

Dune: Awakening has amazing visuals.  The sun is heating the surface, the massive dunes are shifting in the wind, and the blue tones of the current moonlight replace the acid-orange hues of the heavens.  With stunning graphics, a simple UI, and excellent lighting, the game masterfully creates an Arrakis atmosphere. During sandstorms, visibility drops dramatically, and sound design tightens to a tunnel of howling wind and flapping cloth.

Dune: Awakening, PC, Review, Gameplay, Screenshots, GamesCreed

Character models, while not hyper-detailed, are stylized enough to convey personality. Gear upgrades appear visually, and factional armor adds identity to players and NPCs. Special effects, such as the sensor pulse that precedes a sandworm’s emergence, are subtle yet terrifying. The glow of spice and flashes of hallucination add mysticism.

In a similar manner, the art direction leans toward cinematic desert realism with enough alien architecture to ground the game in its sci-fi roots. Visual glitches exist, including mesh warping and sudden pop-ins. But Funcom has promised optimization patches, so they might think that fans will ignore that part. Overall, the visual experience is still captivating and stays true to the Dune mythology.

It’s important to note, though, that Dune: Awakening‘s sound design works well. The spices, creaking floorboards, and gusts of wind full of sand all work together to pull you into the harsh spirit of Arrakis. The music swells dynamically, with ambient hums giving way to dramatic horns during sandworm attacks or faction raids. Not to mention, the choices of the composer echo the grandeur of Hans Zimmer’s film scores without direct imitation.

Voice acting, where present, is sparse but effective. Faction leaders speak with gravitas, and companion NPCs provide atmospheric commentary. Most of the emotional storytelling comes from the world’s ambiance: the distant thump of a sandworm, the clink of metal tools in a base, the eerie silence that precedes a storm.

Dune: Awakening, PC, Review, Gameplay, Screenshots, GamesCreed

Correspondingly, each land carries its own acoustic identity. Mountain passes echo with whispers, oasis zones are filled with trickling water and insect hums, and the Deep Desert roars with howls of endless sand. These layers of audio enrich immersion by transforming travel and combat into sonically distinct experiences.

In this perspective, Dune: Awakening is not merely a survival game. Having the ability to draw you into a vast world of danger, politics, and ecological fragility, it is a full-bodied reimagining of one of the most influential sci-fi universes ever conceived. The game rewards players who stick with it, whether they’re building fortresses on bedrock, flying an ornithopter into a PvP ambush, or figuring out how to deal with spice-fueled hallucinations.

4.2
Great 4.2
Good Stuff The game seamlessly blends survival systems like hydration, shelter, and heat management with the lore of Arrakis, creating immersive and high-stakes gameplay. With procedurally generated events, sandworm threats, faction wars, and ever-changing environmental conditions, no two gameplay sessions feel alike. The game delivers breathtaking desert landscapes, immersive weather effects, and a richly layered soundscape that fully captures the mood of the Dune universe. XP systems, crafting trees, and faction reputations offer tangible gameplay rewards and help shape both your character and the political landscape of the game world.
Bad Stuff While ranged combat is serviceable, melee mechanics are stiff, and animations lack fluidity. Enemy AI, particularly in early encounters, often feels simplistic or buggy. Progression to high-level content like PvP and advanced dungeons is slow, potentially deterring more casual players due to the grind-heavy leveling system.
Summary
Dune: Awakening is a deep, rewarding, and complicated game that will give you a lot of fun if you're willing to deal with the sandstorms and rise through the faction ranks.  It's a game that asks a lot of its players and gives them a living, breathing Arrakis that few other forms of media have captured so well.
TAGGED:Dune: AwakeningFuncomUnreal Engine 5
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ByMaisie Scott
Hi, I'm Maisie and I'll be sharing my game reviews and articles on GamesCreed.

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