Cubic Odyssey is the latest title from the inventive minds at Atypical Games, with publishing duties handled by Gaijin Network Ltd. Released on May 14, the game is a sandbox space exploration adventure that blends open-ended survival, crafting, and interplanetary discovery. It’s available across PC (Steam), Xbox Series X|S, and PlayStation 5, offering full cross-platform parity right from launch.

From Planet to Planet: Discovery Woven Into the World
From the outset, it’s clear the developers aren’t hiding their influences. Think No Man’s Sky’s endless starfields and Minecraft’s creative DNA, then filter it all through a chunky voxel lens. The result is a hybrid that sounds familiar on paper but surprises in execution. This isn’t just another genre mashup — Cubic Odyssey has a vision, and it’s remarkably well-realized.
Unlike games that slap a lore log on the menu screen and call it a day, Cubic Odyssey slowly feeds you fragments of a broader galactic mystery. The game doesn’t rush to tell you a story — it encourages you to stumble into it. Ancient alien runes, derelict spacecraft, cryptic energy readings — clues to a lost civilization or cosmic event are scattered across the universe, never forced, always found.
Each planet feels like its own micro-setting, complete with unique ecosystems, hazards, and hidden histories. You’re not just visiting new worlds — you’re uncovering them, layer by layer. The narrative emerges organically, in true exploratory fashion. This kind of environmental storytelling feels earned and immersive, especially for those who don’t want to be bogged down by exposition.

A Game of Two Halves: Controls That Keep Up With Your Ambition
The gameplay is split between interstellar exploration and creative construction — and both systems are impressively deep. One moment you’re piloting your ship through asteroid belts or atmospheric turbulence, the next you’re carving a base into the side of a cliff or erecting a power grid across alien terrain.
Controls are sharp and well-tuned, whether you’re maneuvering in zero-G or placing building blocks with precision. The interface is equally slick — streamlined but not shallow, with a learning curve that ramps up gently. Resource collection, crafting, and construction flow together intuitively, encouraging you to experiment without overwhelming you with micromanagement.
This is not a passive builder. The universe reacts to you — environments shift, weather interferes, and creatures don’t always take kindly to being mined around. There’s a survival undertone, but it never dominates the experience. Instead, it enhances your investment in the worlds you visit — and shape.

Blocky Beauty Meets Technical Polish
The visuals strike an immediate chord. While the voxel-based aesthetic draws obvious comparisons to Minecraft, Cubic Odyssey leans further into stylistic cohesion. Every planet you visit is visually distinct — glowing bioluminescent jungles, shimmering crystal canyons, or windswept, bone-dry moons. Each environment feels handcrafted despite being procedurally generated.
Performance is another highlight. On all tested platforms, the game runs with surprising smoothness, even during high-stress situations like meteor showers or large-scale base construction. Load times are brief, frame rates remain stable, and bugs are rare.
The audio design is nothing short of atmospheric brilliance. Ambient soundscapes immerse you in each location, with layered effects like distant thunder on gas giants or subtle alien murmurs in overgrown temples. The soundtrack is restrained yet memorable—ambient synths swell and recede like breath, adapting seamlessly to your pace and surroundings, subtly driven by the resonant tones of a magnificent handpan. Whether you’re drifting silently between stars or deep-mining in caverns lit only by your torchlight, the sound design grounds the experience both emotionally and spatially.

Final Thoughts
Cubic Odyssey doesn’t just borrow ideas — it elevates them. What could’ve been a shallow mix of popular mechanics is instead a confident, creative sandbox that rewards curiosity, invention, and patience. It nails the tension between freedom and direction, letting you chart your own path without feeling aimless.
This is a game that lets you be both the astronaut and the architect — not just surviving in space, but thriving in it, shaping it, even storytelling through it. Cubic Odyssey is a game that quietly takes over your imagination — and refuses to give it back. If you’re drawn to games that let you explore not only galaxies but your own creativity, this one is more than worth your time. It’s not just another star-faring simulator. It’s a universe made of blocks — and possibilities.
Additional Information
Release Date: May 14, 2025
Reviewed On: PC. Download code provided by the publisher and PR agency.
Developer: Atypical Games
Publisher: Gaijin Network Ltd
Official Website: https://cubicodyssey.game/en
Relevant Links: Cubic Odyssey on Steam, Cubic Odyssey on Xbox, Cubic Odyssey on PlayStation