By Christopher Livingston
Copyright pcgamer
Skip to main content
Close main menu
THE GLOBAL AUTHORITY ON PC GAMES
View Profile
Search PC Gamer
PC Gaming Show
Movies & TV
Affiliate links
Meet the team
Community guidelines
About PC Gamer
PC Gamer Magazine Subscription
Why subscribe?
Subscribe to the world’s #1 PC gaming mag
Try a single issue or save on a subscription
Issues delivered straight to your door or device
From£35.99Subscribe now
Borderlands 4
Essential Hardware
Battlefield 6
Don’t miss these
The follow-up to one of the decade’s best detective games will have you selling cursed antiques to Victorian weirdos next month
One of the best detective games of the decade is free to keep on Epic this week
It’s a golden age for weird Eastern European games—you can tell because I’m in love with a horror puzzler about 2 old men trying to find evil in the woods
The Drifter review—Gritty Aussie noir meets conspiratorial sci-fi
My new bedtime Steam Deck go-to is a cozy bookshop sim where everyone loves hearing my opinion
Eriksholm: The Stolen Dream review—Beautiful Scandinavian stealth that’s too strict for its own good
Its demo only took me 10 minutes, but this claymation picture book puzzle game inspired by medieval alchemy is one to watch out for
This Australian puzzler that took seven years to make is basically Myst with endearingly naff FMVs and music composed by a 10-year-old
Out and About is exactly what I want from a foraging game and has convinced me that I could easily make a meal out of what I find in my back garden
My heart’s already been stolen by this stop-motion adventure made out of wood and ‘mostly in a garden shed’
Caput Mortum is a fantastic, bite-sized horror game
The 20 best cozy games on PC that aren’t farm sims
City Builder
This brilliant dark and moody cyberpunk city builder is my kind of cosy game—and for less than $7 you might as well see if it’s yours too
Help! I’ve been transported back in time to the days of Flash, Miniclip, and Adventure Quest by this charming little ’90s-inspired RPG
Shadow Labyrinth review: Pac-Man is entertainingly miscast in this grimdark Metroidvania
Strange Antiquities
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.
Strange Antiquities review
Unravel the mysteries of occult artifacts in your creepy yet cozy little shop.
Christopher Livingston
15 September 2025
(Image: © Iceberg Interactive)
Our Verdict
A great cozy yet creepy puzzle adventure packed with dozens of little mysteries to solve.
PC Gamer’s got your back
Our experienced team dedicates many hours to every review, to really get to the heart of what matters most to you. Find out more about how we evaluate games and hardware.
Need to Know
What is it? A cozy puzzle adventure about identifying occult artifacts.
Developer: Bad Viking
Publisher: Iceberg Interactive
Reviewed on: Intel i7 9700K, RTX 4070 Ti, 16GB RAM
Multiplayer? No
Link: Steam
If the “What Is This Thing?” subreddit existed in the Edwardian era, it’d be a quiet little curio shop called Strange Antiquities. As a temp shopkeeper filling in for the local thaumaturge, I sit behind a desk and spend my rainy days puzzling over bizarre artifacts to determine what they are and what they do.
A glass bottle containing a single glowing strand of hair suspended in blue liquid. An iron claw clutching black gemstone covered in blood-red streaks. Grotesque wooden figurines, several items that appear to be severed hands, a silver pendant with a green eyeball in the center that rolls to follow my every movement. What are these things?
Fans of Bad Viking’s first shopkeeping puzzle adventure, Strange Horticulture, will feel right at home in the gloomy yet cozy occult shop solving the little mysteries surrounding each artifact, dozens and dozens of them, over the course of about 12 hours.
Related Articles
The follow-up to one of the decade’s best detective games will have you selling cursed antiques to Victorian weirdos next month
One of the best detective games of the decade is free to keep on Epic this week
It’s a golden age for weird Eastern European games—you can tell because I’m in love with a horror puzzler about 2 old men trying to find evil in the woods
While Strange Antiquities doesn’t manage to be quite as novel and intriguing as its predecessor, it’s still a satisfying detective adventure about gathering clues, solving puzzles, and unraveling a larger mystery taking place outside the doors of your quaint little shop.
Artifact and fiction
(Image credit: Iceberg Interactive)
Welcome to the town of Undermere, where townsfolk visit your store each day with a problem that only a trinket with magical powers can solve. One customer might want something to ward off nightmares, while another is looking for something to improve his hearing, and someone else complains that an acquaintance has been stealing their jewelry and wants to put a stop to it. There are apparently no therapists, doctors, or cops available, so maybe you, a shopkeeper in a store full of knickknacks, has an occult remedy that’ll fit the bill?
Before you can become an artifact dealer, you need to become a detective, examining the collection of weird, unlabeled items in your shop and trying to ID them. Start by choosing which of your senses you want to use first, and hover your mouse over the item you want to inspect. Your eyes can tell you what an item is made of, you can use your nose to see if it has a scent or odor, and use your ears to listen to an artifact, as occasionally an item will make some sort of noise. (Unless it’s just your imagination.)
(Image credit: Iceberg Interactive)
There’s also your sense of touch, to gauge how an object feels, and inner perception, to gauge how an object, you know, feels. Do you experience fear or confusion or maybe power while touching the item? The only sense you don’t use in Strange Horticulture is taste, but I wouldn’t lick most of these trinkets, especially not the one that looks like a withered hand with a gold spiral ring one finger. Would you put your tongue on that?
The biggest gaming news, reviews and hardware deals
Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.
Contact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBy submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.
With those clues, it’s time to do what we did before the internet: look things up in a big ol’ book that has, much like your customers and yourself, less than complete information. If a statuette has runes carved into it you can consult your book on symbolism to find out what they might mean. If a pendant contains jade or amethyst or obsidian, page through your gemstone guide to see what the various stones could represent.
(Image credit: Iceberg Interactive)
And your huge artifact guidebook offers lore and history about the different types of items you might come across, though it’s rarely as specific as you’d hope it would be. I never looked at an item on my shelf and found an identical picture of it in one of my books. It’s not gonna be that simple.
One great little case closed, dozens more to go.
But piecing it all together is where the satisfaction comes in—examining a faded drawing for a hidden clue, deciphering a series of runes, getting the vibe of the item by examining it, then combining all those scraps of information and making your best guess as to what an artifact actually is—and only finding out if you’re right when you drag it into the customer’s hands. Your reward for solving a little tiny mystery (beyond a satisfied customer) is labeling the artifact you’ve correctly ID’d and placing it proudly on your shelf. One great little case closed, dozens more to go.
Related Articles
The follow-up to one of the decade’s best detective games will have you selling cursed antiques to Victorian weirdos next month
One of the best detective games of the decade is free to keep on Epic this week
It’s a golden age for weird Eastern European games—you can tell because I’m in love with a horror puzzler about 2 old men trying to find evil in the woods
It’s not just the items in your shop that are strange, but the shop itself. A little crank on your desk raises a platform with a socket that some item in your collection may fit into, maybe. The symbols running around the edge of your desk have a few gaps—I wonder what happens when I find some spare runes to fill them with? And the clock on the wall has an unusual feature, though not a useful one—at least not yet.
Piecing together the mysteries of your own sales counter is a big part of the fun as you eventually unlock the shop’s full potential. One of the most fun items to use (once you figure out how to access it) is a device that lets you view the energy signatures of the various geegaws in your collection—another great tool that’ll help with IDing your growing collection of magic trinkets. If an item doesn’t have an energy field? Well, that’s a big clue, too.
(Image credit: Iceberg Interactive)
As in the first game, there are also excursions of a sort: using one of the several maps you collect and the clues you’ll receive in the mail (or even in the dreams you have between the days tending your sales counter) means you can click on a map location and get a snatch of a story describing what happens when you explore it.
The town is filled with locations to visit in hopes of acquiring more long-lost artifacts to add to your collection, and yes, you can even visit the little botany shop you ran in Strange Horticulture. Two more maps eventually lead to new environments: a quirky old castle and a spooky crypt, pleasantly giving a game where you sit behind a desk all day a more sprawling feel.
(Image credit: Iceberg Interactive)
While you fret over all the tiny mysteries in your shop, there’s also a sense of gathering dread from the outside world, as customers bring reports of unusual occurrences happening around the town—such as the growing number of people who have fallen into trances, their eyeballs becoming inky black. No wonder your occult shop is doing such good business these days.
Eventually, you’ll be able to put your knowledge of occult artifacts to use to stave off grim disaster, or depending on some of the choices you’ve made, experience a darker ending to the story. I tried being a nice and trustworthy shopkeep in my playthrough and still wound up with several townsfolk losing their minds and more than one person dead. Hey, I did my best. I’m only a temp, after all.
(Image credit: Iceberg Interactive)
As in the first game there’s a nice balance of challenges, with some puzzles being pretty straightforward and others being fairly tricky, but there’s a well-designed and progressive hint system you can use if you’re stuck. The only thing the game doesn’t want you to do is rush through it by brute-forcing puzzle solutions, so if you guess wrong too many times you’re punished by having to play a pretty mid dice game to refresh your guesses.
I don’t love Strange Antiquities quite as much as the original Strange Horticulture, perhaps because even with more maps, reference books, and investigational features to use, it’s still a bit too similar to feel fresh, and the overarching story of what’s going on in the town isn’t quite as intriguing this time around. But Strange Antiquities is still great, a calm and cozy adventure that makes you feel like more than just a shopkeeper in a weird little store. It makes you feel like a detective.
The Verdict
Read our review policy
Strange Antiquities
A great cozy yet creepy puzzle adventure packed with dozens of little mysteries to solve.
Christopher Livingston
Social Links Navigation
Senior Editor
Chris started playing PC games in the 1980s, started writing about them in the early 2000s, and (finally) started getting paid to write about them in the late 2000s. Following a few years as a regular freelancer, PC Gamer hired him in 2014, probably so he’d stop emailing them asking for more work. Chris has a love-hate relationship with survival games and an unhealthy fascination with the inner lives of NPCs. He’s also a fan of offbeat simulation games, mods, and ignoring storylines in RPGs so he can make up his own.
You must confirm your public display name before commenting
Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.
The follow-up to one of the decade’s best detective games will have you selling cursed antiques to Victorian weirdos next month
One of the best detective games of the decade is free to keep on Epic this week
It’s a golden age for weird Eastern European games—you can tell because I’m in love with a horror puzzler about 2 old men trying to find evil in the woods
The Drifter review—Gritty Aussie noir meets conspiratorial sci-fi
My new bedtime Steam Deck go-to is a cozy bookshop sim where everyone loves hearing my opinion
Eriksholm: The Stolen Dream review—Beautiful Scandinavian stealth that’s too strict for its own good
Latest in Puzzle
One of my favorite puzzle games ever is free for the week on the Epic Games Store
This Australian puzzler that took seven years to make is basically Myst with endearingly naff FMVs and music composed by a 10-year-old
Today’s Wordle clues, hints and answer for September 15 (#1549)
Crossword lovers in mourning as the New York Times commits its latest unspeakable act: Paywalling the Mini puzzle
One of the best detective games of the decade is free to keep on Epic this week
Today’s Wordle clues, hints and answer for September 14 (#1548)
Latest in Reviews
Medion Erazer Scout 15 E1 gaming laptop review
Strange Antiquities review: Solve dozens of little mysteries in a creepy yet cozy curio shop
Hollow Knight: Silksong review — Worth the pain
Asus ProArt Case PA401 review
Acer Predator Helios 18 AI gaming laptop review
LiberNovo Omni gaming chair review
HARDWARE BUYING GUIDES
LATEST GAME REVIEWS
Best Hall effect keyboards in 2025: the fastest, most customizable keyboards for competitive gaming
Best PCIe 5.0 SSD for gaming in 2025: the only Gen 5 drives I will allow in my PC
Best graphics cards in 2025: I’ve tested pretty much every AMD and Nvidia GPU of the past 20 years and these are today’s top cards
Best gaming chair in 2025: I’ve tested a ton of gaming chairs and these are the seats I’d suggest for any PC gamer
Best Steam Deck accessories in Australia for 2025: Our favorite docks, powerbanks and gamepads
Medion Erazer Scout 15 E1 review
Hollow Knight: Silksong review
Asus ProArt Case PA401 review
Acer Predator Helios 18 AI gaming laptop review
LiberNovo Omni gaming chair review
PC Gamer is part of Future plc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.
Contact Future’s experts
Terms and conditions
Privacy policy
Cookies policy
Advertise with us
Accessibility Statement
Future Publishing Limited Quay House, The Ambury,
BA1 1UA. All rights reserved. England and Wales company registration number 2008885.
Please login or signup to comment
Please wait…