Enshrouded's 2024 roadmap includes animal farming, weather, world events
Following Enshrouded's impressive early access launch back in January, developer Keen Games has shared the first iteration of its 2024 roadmap for the co-op survival action-RPG, featuring the likes of animal farming, weather, world events, and more.
Keen Games revealed its roadmap — heavily inspired by the community's most-requested features — over on Steam, explaining, «On the one hand, we have big ambitions for the game, and loads of ideas! On the other hand, Enshrouded is a brand new game, and some of the things we want to do might turn out to be more difficult than we can anticipate! It's a push-and-pull of wanting to keep you interested, without over-promising on our capacity to deliver.»
To see this content please enable targeting cookies. Manage cookie settings Enshrouded's early access launch trailer.Watch on YouTubeTo that end, Keen's initial 2024 roadmap includes a mix of smaller-scale and more ambitious features — spanning everything from new biomes to the ability to sit on chairs — with the following all planned to release as part of Enshrouded's «next few updates»:
- Mountains biome
- Hollow Halls dungeons
- Animal farming
- Musical instruments
- Weather system
- Vanity system
- New enemies and bosses
- Location improvements
- Nameable map locations
- Multiple NPC instances
- Townsfolk NPCs
- Townsfolk pets
- Enemy patrols
- More trees to grow
- Potted plants
- Round doors and windows
- New building materials
- Named tombstones
- Nameable bases
- Editable signs
- Sitting on furniture
- Workshops craft from magic quests
- Replayable world quests
- Better quest sorting
- Improved loot UI
- Better stack splitting
- Reassignable glider shortcut
- Multiplayer pings
- Performance improvements
- Smoother high FPS gameplay
- Improved post processing
- Fixes and polishing
- Portals to other servers
- Server gamerplay settings
- Server user rights
- Steam Deck support
It's an exciting list (even if the vast majority of my time in Enshrouded has so far been spent obssessively prettifying an increasingly