• 136 Achievements Earned
  • 136 Players Tracked
  • 1 Total Achievements
  • 50 Obtainable EXP
  • 136 100% Club

Steam Price History

Store Description


Dark Train is an award-winning steampunk 2D adventure made of paper. Assume the role of mechanical squid Ann 2.35f that is tied to the tremendous machine and deliver the mysterious order for deceased D. W. Tagrezbung, the famous inventor from the Border City.


* dynamic controls
* dark atmosphere
* textless narration
* paper-made visual
* no hints, no help




Dark Train in its game mechanics core is an adventure without point-n-click mechanics. You take control of a mechanical squid Ann 2.35f via a controller or a mouse. By exploring the train structure, environments within wagons, train control panels and its surroundings, you are progressing further in the game and story.





Our story follows the journey of the inventor D. W. Tagrezbung and the mysterious contract from an unknown client which he received years ago. Even as a child, he created a functional model of the universe and throughout his life drew attention to himself thanks to many significant inventions. At an advanced age of his peaceful life, he received the last big contract with an extraordinary assignment. The client requested the creation of a model of the human world that embraces changeable weather and civilization. What he did not want to be part of the model was the human face or even people themselves. The actual challenge was presented by the creation of transportation that would be capable of delivering the order. Inhospitable territory stretching between the client and the inventor is for centuries connected only by rail. Therefore D. W. decided to create a self-sufficient train with four wagons where each wagon will contain one familiar environment from his world. These environments are Forest, City, Graveyard, and Pool. The ingenious inventor also did not forget to include various combinations of environments and theirs mutual weather or architecture affects. Eventually, D. W. Tagrezbung devoted the rest of his life to the client's order. The day the train was finally ready to go, the famous inventor died.