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Jötunn's Greed is an action-packed adventure game where you play as a clan leader tasked with raiding villages to gather loot and build power. Developed by Fried Squid Games LLC, it launched on October 28, 2025, for PC. The game blends looting, resource management, and combat as you grow your tribe to confront a vengeful giant. Set in a Norse-inspired world, it emphasizes fast-paced raids and strategic planning. Players manage a team of raiders, loot settlements for resources, and use those gains to strengthen defenses and weapons. The core loop revolves around escalating challenges as you prepare for the final showdown with the giant.
The game starts with small-scale raids on weak villages, using basic tools to loot food, weapons, and materials. You assign squad members to specific roles during raids, some gather loot, others handle combat. After each mission, you upgrade your base, craft better gear, and train new raiders. Combat is real-time but manageable, with enemies and defenses scaling in difficulty as your clan grows. The giant remains a looming threat; early encounters end in failure, forcing you to adapt strategies. Missions last 10, 20 minutes, with the campaign lasting 15, 20 hours. The UI is clean, controls are responsive, and the randomized loot system keeps repeated raids feeling fresh.
Jötunn's Greed has a 7.2/10 rating on PlayPile, with 62% of players completing the campaign. Average playtime is 17.5 hours, and 38% of completers earned all 120 achievements. Community moods skew mixed: 45% label it "Fun but repetitive," while 30% call it "Addictive." Critics praise its core loop but criticize shallow upgrades. One player wrote, "The raids get tedious after 10 hours, but the giant fight is worth it." Achievement hunters note that the "Perfect Raid" trophy requires zero deaths, a 2% completion rate.
Jötunn's Greed is a short but punchy game best for fans of loop-based progression. At $29.99, it's affordable for a casual grind session. The addictive raid-loop is undercut by repetitive late-game content, and the lack of multiplayer limits replay value. Achievements add structure but don't fix the game's pacing issues. If you enjoy incremental upgrades and don’t mind a brief campaign, it’s a worthwhile pick. Skip if you prefer deep strategy or open worlds.
Game Modes
Single player
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