Hours: 2,500+ Verdict: Not Recommended (for now) I had to really think about whether to give this game a thumbs up or down. With over 2,500 hours since before Titania released (not during Alpha, but early on), I’ve put more time into Beasts of Bermuda than into The Isle or Path of Titans. It’s been one hell of a run — learning every curve of dinosaurs, survival mechanics, PVP strategies, maps, weather, and disasters. I can’t deny it’s been fun. Over the years, we’ve seen big changes: growth rates, dinosaur skill trees, new mechanics, multiple maps, and new species. But each update seems to come with backlash, and since late 2024 the overall experience — and the community — has felt like it’s sliding downhill. I’ve played extensively on both official and community servers. The vibe is unfortunately similar: toxic is the easy word for it. The player base is now oversaturated with long-time veterans who dominate the meta. If you’re new, the steep learning curve (t...
Beasts of Bermuda
- Release Date:
- Dec 21, 2018
- Developer:
- Sastrei Studios, LLC
- Publisher:
- Sastrei Studios, LLC
- Platforms:
- Windows
Game Tags
About This Game

Beasts of Bermuda is a multiplayer survival game in which the player is a dinosaur or other prehistoric creature. A player can take the role of flyers, swimmers, herbivores, carnivores, and semi-aquatic creatures that fulfill different niches in the ecosystem. No matter what the player chooses to be, the objective of the game is to survive and grow up on the islands of Bermuda by using their particular creature's abilities. Predation from other players as well as intense environmental events are the antagonistic forces in the game the player must survive against.
There are currently three game modes in Beasts of Bermuda.

In Free Roam game mode the player selects a creature of choice and spawns into the world as a juvenile of that species. They must survive and gradually grow larger over time. As growth accumulates, they also earn talents, which can be spent to enhance different aspects of your creature's capabilities. In this mode growth is slower but resource management is easier.
In Life Cycle game mode the player selects a creature and spawns into the world as a juvenile of that species. You must survive and grow larger in a fast paced growth setting. As growth accumulates, you will earn talents to enhance different aspects of your creature's capabilities. After 1.32 growth you can choose to enter a stage called Gauntlet, where the difficulty of the game increases with growth in the form of food, water, and ailment management. In this mode growth is faster but resource management is harder. Compete on a monthly leaderboard to earn the top growth ranking for your species!
In Combat game mode players are pitted against one another with mechanics that are designed to reward conflict. Servers can use Deathmatch Maps which are smaller with close together spawn locations. The player spawns in as an adult creature of their choice and can accrue more talent points by killing other players and stealing their points. The game mode is endless and uses points and kill/death ratios to show who reigns supreme on the server.

Screenshots
User Reviews
1,425 hours played, and I wish I could say Id recommend this game, however here are the reasons I can not: The Official Staff/Admins/Moderators: ~Are all inconsistent with information and punishments. Stating that each thing is "case by case", causing unfair treatment between the player base. ~Do not address help tickets in a timely manner. Including those that are time sensitive/happening live. Such as active hackers, cheaters, stuck players, game breaking bugs. ~Are allowed to have alt accounts/play with a hidden name and proceed to be toxic to the player base. Such as rage baiting them in chat. ~Do not seem to have access to/or otherwise do not use Logs to actually help players in most situations. The Community on Official servers: ~Pretty toxic over all. The Devs allow quite a bit of rage baiting/swearing and over-all disrespectful Global chat. ~There is a large amount of Clans who take the 'Survival' aspect of the game, throw it out the window, and simply self-feed, sit arou...
It feels like a good game, but the issue for me is that there isn't much to do. most servers seem like dinosaur chat-rooms where people just are hanging out as neon and glowing dinos.
Herbivores are scary. Carnivores are scary. I dig hole. I live in hole. I dig
Beasts of Bermuda is NOT a survival game. It's an AFK simulator, let me explain... 90% of the player base chill on auto-revive servers (THIS IS NOT SURVIVAL), where players just get revived when they die. These are considered as ROLEPLAY servers. 10% of the players play Life cycle, which IS survival. However, 60-70% of active Life cycle players CHEAT. Most players you get killed by, or kill are usually cheating. Whether that be hacked bio skins, refilling food, ESPing, or stathacking. However, this game has another underlying issue, and that's simply just the Developers do not give a CRAP. The developers won't spend any money towards any ACTIVE anti-cheat programs. They may "use" EAC, but it's the free version, it doesn't actually prevent anything it's just basic systems anyone knows how to get around. The devs are aware of this, as they're constantly global-banning players daily. The developers have set themselves a system to farm "cheaters" or just global banning playe...
A Broken game hanging on by the developer's hopes and dreams. Updates are rare, and when they do come, they are filled with game breaking bugs and content. Found a glitch? it'll never be patched. Playables that are fine and well will always managed to be ruined by either being make too strong, or made weak for no valid reason. Save your money, buy another dino game than ts.
Full of hackers, that are never stoped or checked durin reports on discord, and dont make me talk about discord.. their server is flawed, terrible staff that do nothing a good 90% times, and 10% they do something is because a familiar reported it so they immediatly react otherwise they ignore problems and give stupid excuses.
Nothing but friendly interactions with people. 100% of the time. WORST thing I could imagine was saying "erm ackshualy I'm a spicy ramen noodle" when the other player was launching a barrage of insults and profanity laced rage at me, and calling me a toilet snake - though in different words. Chat banned. No way to appeal. Ridiculous.
Had such great potential but it seems like everyone has just given up on it. It is definitely a snake dominated game now. I was enjoying the game surviving as a flyer and dealt with quite a few encounters from bigger dinos even a few snakes. But I ultimately decided to uninstall this game after remembering/experiencing the snakes jumping 100's of feet high and plucking you out of the air with one bite. A lot of great potential wasted in my opinion.
Reasons to Not buy: Tail riding Bad Ping No population on any servers besides 2 US servers. Reasons to buy You want to be dinosaur? Growth system, allowing you to become the biggest and show on the server leaderboard.
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System Requirements
Minimum
- Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
- OS *: Windows 8 or later, 64 bit only
- Processor: AMD X8 FX-8350 @ 4GHz / AMD Ryzen 3 1200 @ 3.1GHz / Intel Core i5-3470 @ 3.2GHz
- Memory: 8 GB RAM
- Graphics: AMD Radeon RX 5300 / Nvidia GeForce GTX 680 / Nvidia GeForce GTX 770 / Nvidia GeForce GTX 960
- DirectX: Version 12
- Network: Broadband Internet connection
- Storage: 20 GB available space
Recommended
- Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
- OS: Windows 10 or later, 64 bit only
- Processor: AMD Ryzen 5 1400 @ 3.2GHz / Intel Core i7-4770 @ 3.4GHz
- Memory: 16 GB RAM
- Graphics: AMD Radeon RX 6600 / Nvidia GeForce GTX 980 / Nvidia GeForce GTX 1070 / Nvidia GeForce RTX 2060
- DirectX: Version 12
- Network: Broadband Internet connection
- Storage: 20 GB available space
FAQ
How much does Beasts of Bermuda cost?
Beasts of Bermuda costs $19.99.
What are the system requirements for Beasts of Bermuda?
Minimum: Minimum: Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system OS *: Windows 8 or later, 64 bit only Processor: AMD X8 FX-8350 @ 4GHz / AMD Ryzen 3 1200 @ 3.1GHz / Intel Core i5-3470 @ 3.2GHz Memory: 8 GB RAM Graphics: AMD Radeon RX 5300 / Nvidia GeForce GTX 680 / Nvidia GeForce GTX 770 / Nvidia GeForce GTX 960 DirectX: Version 12 Network: Broadband Internet connection Storage: 20 GB available space Recommended: Recommended: Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system OS: Windows 10 or later, 64 bit only Processor: AMD Ryzen 5 1400 @ 3.2GHz / Intel Core i7-4770 @ 3.4GHz Memory: 16 GB RAM Graphics: AMD Radeon RX 6600 / Nvidia GeForce GTX 980 / Nvidia GeForce GTX 1070 / Nvidia GeForce RTX 2060 DirectX: Version 12 Network: Broadband Internet connection Storage: 20 GB available space
What platforms is Beasts of Bermuda available on?
Beasts of Bermuda is available on Windows PC.
Is Beasts of Bermuda worth buying?
Beasts of Bermuda has 57% positive reviews from 67 players.
When was Beasts of Bermuda released?
Beasts of Bermuda was released on Dec 21, 2018.
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