Roman survival townbuilder Romestead is having a real moment, and the YouTube community is leading the charge. Here are four videos we keep coming back to, from a sharp review to a 100-day saga, plus how to spin up your own server.
A Roman survival townbuilder that gathers by day and fights the undead by night, and the creator scene has fallen for it. Here are four videos we love, and how to run your own world.
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Romestead launched into Steam Early Access in May 2026 and has barely left people's feeds since. It's a co-op survival townbuilder with a Roman twist: gather and farm by day, defend your settlement against undead raids by night, and unlock new buildings by winning the favour of the Roman gods instead of grinding a traditional tech tree. Heavy resources are real, physical objects you carry, throw and haul, so dragging lumber and stone back to camp becomes its own small adventure.
It plays solo or with up to eight friends, which is exactly where a dedicated server earns its keep: the world stays online when you log off, everyone shares one save, and no host has to leave their PC running all night. We host Romestead on our own EU hardware. Pick a plan on the Romestead page and you're online in about a minute and a half.
MetaForge is a guides-and-tools channel (they run the companion site metaforge.app), so their 15 Beginner Tips is exactly what it says: a tight, no-waffle list to get your first few days right. It's the one we'd hand a friend who just bought the game.
The Singleplayer Squad specialises in short, straight-to-the-point reviews and "before you buy" takes on single-player and indie games, so if you're still deciding, start with their Romestead review. It's a genuinely useful gut-check, and the channel is worth a subscribe if you live on the indie and single-player side of things: there's a steady stream of the same kind of concise reviews.
The "100 days" format never gets old, and Rogue does it across loads of survival games. I Spent 100 Days in Romestead compresses a full settlement arc into one watch, and it's the best way to see how a world really grows over a long playthrough before you commit your own hundred.
Jade PG has covered survival games for years, and it shows: his Need To Know Tips video is clear, well-paced and focused on what actually matters right now, like best weapons, easier exploration and smarter town building. If you want guides that respect your time, this is the channel.
Every plan ships with on-demand backups, DDoS protection and EU hosting. Bigger worlds need more memory, so the world-size picker only shows sizes your plan can generate.
Yes. Romestead is built for 1-8 players co-op, and a dedicated server keeps that shared world online whether or not you're logged in.
It's balanced for up to 8. You set the cap when you create the server; higher numbers work but play degrades past 8.
It depends on your world size. Small worlds run on the entry Homestead plan; larger worlds need more memory, so the world-size picker hides any size your current plan can't generate. Upgrade to unlock the bigger ones.
No, it's in Steam Early Access (since May 2026), so expect ongoing updates, new biomes and bosses. Your world and saves carry across updates.
Usually under two minutes from payment to a running server, on our EU hardware.
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Pick a plan and we'll have your Romestead world online in about ninety seconds.
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