• Latest
  • Trending
While the Iron's Hot Review

While the Iron’s Hot Review: Forging Your Blacksmith Dreams

The Odyssey Review

The Odyssey Review: Christopher Nolan Turns Homecoming Into Judgment

The Isolate Thief Review

The Isolate Thief Review: Blood Freezes at the Outpost

Shipwrecked: Nightmare at Sea Review

Shipwrecked: Nightmare at Sea Review: A Cruise Holiday Turns Into a Death Trap

The Mound: Omen of Cthulhu Review

The Mound: Omen of Cthulhu Review: Never Trust the Treasure Pedestal

Hot Girl Summer Review

Hot Girl Summer Review: Desire Steps Into the Sunlight

Thunder 3 Review

Thunder 3 Review: Netflix Lets the Weird One Through

Try! Review

Try! Review: No Player Left Behind

Learning to Breathe Under Water Review

Learning to Breathe Under Water Review: Grief Lives in the Roof

Moss: The Forgotten Relic Review

Moss: The Forgotten Relic Review: Quill Escapes the Headset

The Real Wolf of Wall Street Review

The Real Wolf of Wall Street Review: Scorsese Already Knew the Story

Lucky Review

Lucky Review: Anya Taylor-Joy Runs Faster Than the Story

George Lucas

George Lucas Compares Rejecting AI to Rejecting Cars, Sparking Fan Backlash

15 hours ago
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Thursday, July 16, 2026
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    George Lucas

    George Lucas Compares Rejecting AI to Rejecting Cars, Sparking Fan Backlash

    Colin From Accounts

    ‘Colin From Accounts’ to End With Season 3

    Tom Cruise

    Tom Cruise to Make Special Appearance at World Cup Closing Ceremony

    Christopher Nolan

    Nolan Fans Rearrange Their Lives to See ‘The Odyssey’ in 70mm Imax

    Paramount Skydance

    Paramount Agrees to Merge Antitrust Case With Subscriber Lawsuit

    Andy Serkis

    Andy Serkis Returns as Gollum in First ‘Hunt for Gollum’ Set Footage

    Scott Bryce

    Scott Bryce, ‘As the World Turns’ Star Who Played Craig Montgomery, Dies at 68

    Summer House Season 11

    ‘Summer House’ Season 11 Cast Confirmed After Batula, Wilson Exits

    David Zaslav

    David Zaslav Sells $59 Million More in Warner Bros. Discovery Stock

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    The Odyssey Review

    The Odyssey Review: Christopher Nolan Turns Homecoming Into Judgment

    The Isolate Thief Review

    The Isolate Thief Review: Blood Freezes at the Outpost

    Shipwrecked: Nightmare at Sea Review

    Shipwrecked: Nightmare at Sea Review: A Cruise Holiday Turns Into a Death Trap

    Hot Girl Summer Review

    Hot Girl Summer Review: Desire Steps Into the Sunlight

    Thunder 3 Review

    Thunder 3 Review: Netflix Lets the Weird One Through

    Try! Review

    Try! Review: No Player Left Behind

    Learning to Breathe Under Water Review

    Learning to Breathe Under Water Review: Grief Lives in the Roof

    The Real Wolf of Wall Street Review

    The Real Wolf of Wall Street Review: Scorsese Already Knew the Story

    Lucky Review

    Lucky Review: Anya Taylor-Joy Runs Faster Than the Story

  • Game Reviews
    The Mound: Omen of Cthulhu Review

    The Mound: Omen of Cthulhu Review: Never Trust the Treasure Pedestal

    Moss: The Forgotten Relic Review

    Moss: The Forgotten Relic Review: Quill Escapes the Headset

    The Alters: Last Variable Review

    The Alters: Last Variable Review: Science Leaves Its Feelings in Cryosleep

    Cat Mail Co. Review

    Cat Mail Co. Review: Stamping Parcels Loses Its Spark

    We Gotta Go Review

    We Gotta Go Review: Toilet Panic Needs Stronger Systems

    Ascend to ZERO Review

    Ascend to ZERO Review: Every Second Becomes a Weapon

    DOOM: The Dark Ages | Revelations Review

    DOOM: The Dark Ages | Revelations Review: The Slayer Learns to Fly Again

    Moldwasher Review

    Moldwasher Review: Pixel Grime Meets Lo-Fi Calm

    Last Flag Review

    Last Flag Review: Capture the Flag Finds a Clever New Hiding Place

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    George Lucas

    George Lucas Compares Rejecting AI to Rejecting Cars, Sparking Fan Backlash

    Colin From Accounts

    ‘Colin From Accounts’ to End With Season 3

    Tom Cruise

    Tom Cruise to Make Special Appearance at World Cup Closing Ceremony

    Christopher Nolan

    Nolan Fans Rearrange Their Lives to See ‘The Odyssey’ in 70mm Imax

    Paramount Skydance

    Paramount Agrees to Merge Antitrust Case With Subscriber Lawsuit

    Andy Serkis

    Andy Serkis Returns as Gollum in First ‘Hunt for Gollum’ Set Footage

    Scott Bryce

    Scott Bryce, ‘As the World Turns’ Star Who Played Craig Montgomery, Dies at 68

    Summer House Season 11

    ‘Summer House’ Season 11 Cast Confirmed After Batula, Wilson Exits

    David Zaslav

    David Zaslav Sells $59 Million More in Warner Bros. Discovery Stock

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    The Odyssey Review

    The Odyssey Review: Christopher Nolan Turns Homecoming Into Judgment

    The Isolate Thief Review

    The Isolate Thief Review: Blood Freezes at the Outpost

    Shipwrecked: Nightmare at Sea Review

    Shipwrecked: Nightmare at Sea Review: A Cruise Holiday Turns Into a Death Trap

    Hot Girl Summer Review

    Hot Girl Summer Review: Desire Steps Into the Sunlight

    Thunder 3 Review

    Thunder 3 Review: Netflix Lets the Weird One Through

    Try! Review

    Try! Review: No Player Left Behind

    Learning to Breathe Under Water Review

    Learning to Breathe Under Water Review: Grief Lives in the Roof

    The Real Wolf of Wall Street Review

    The Real Wolf of Wall Street Review: Scorsese Already Knew the Story

    Lucky Review

    Lucky Review: Anya Taylor-Joy Runs Faster Than the Story

  • Game Reviews
    The Mound: Omen of Cthulhu Review

    The Mound: Omen of Cthulhu Review: Never Trust the Treasure Pedestal

    Moss: The Forgotten Relic Review

    Moss: The Forgotten Relic Review: Quill Escapes the Headset

    The Alters: Last Variable Review

    The Alters: Last Variable Review: Science Leaves Its Feelings in Cryosleep

    Cat Mail Co. Review

    Cat Mail Co. Review: Stamping Parcels Loses Its Spark

    We Gotta Go Review

    We Gotta Go Review: Toilet Panic Needs Stronger Systems

    Ascend to ZERO Review

    Ascend to ZERO Review: Every Second Becomes a Weapon

    DOOM: The Dark Ages | Revelations Review

    DOOM: The Dark Ages | Revelations Review: The Slayer Learns to Fly Again

    Moldwasher Review

    Moldwasher Review: Pixel Grime Meets Lo-Fi Calm

    Last Flag Review

    Last Flag Review: Capture the Flag Finds a Clever New Hiding Place

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
While the Iron's Hot Review

Pokémon Concierge Review: Stop-Motion Pet Simulator Perfection

Steam's Top Tiers: Unveiling the Most Played Games of 2023

Home Games Reviews Games

While the Iron’s Hot Review: Forging Your Blacksmith Dreams

Lose Yourself in Hours of Soothing Yet Engaging Crafting Gameplay

Naser Nahandian by Naser Nahandian
3 years ago
in Games, Nintendo, PC Games, PlayStation, Reviews Games, Xbox
Reading Time: 9 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on TelegramSummarize with ChatGPTSummarize with Perplexity

In the relaxing crafting adventure While the Iron’s Hot, you’ll be stepping into the heavy boots of an up-and-coming blacksmith looking to make his mark in the fantasy land of Ellian. This charming game comes from the combined efforts of publisher Humble Bundle and developer Bontemps Studios, who sought to deliver a combat-free experience focused solely around mastering the age-old art of blacksmithing.

After a fateful shipwreck, you’ll find yourself in possession of an abandoned smithy aching to ring with the sound of hammer on anvil once more. Through smelting, sharpening, and assembling, you’ll take raw materials and transform them into tools, weapons, and other useful items for the locals. It’s an intricate process, but the simple yet engaging minigames make it approachable for apprentice and master alike.

Spend your days filling orders, taking on quests, and breathing life back into the forgotten smithing town, all while unraveling the mysteries of past blacksmiths. With a charming cast of characters and vibrant fantasy setting, While the Iron’s Hot aims to faithfully capture the sights, sounds, and satisfaction of being a blacksmith. So put on that heavy apron, fire up the forge, and see if you have the steel to become a master tradesman.

Mastering the Blacksmithing Craft

While the Iron’s Hot drops you into a robust crafting system centered around forging metal and other materials at your trusty smithy. The gameplay loop finds you gathering resources from the surrounding fantasy landscape, smelting them down and shaping them via engaging minigames, and then turning those crafted pieces into useful items to fulfill town orders and quests. The complexity and challenge of recipes slowly ramps up as you progress, but starting out is simple enough to quickly get in a zen-like flow.

When you first inherit the abandoned smithy, your equipment and knowledge will be limited, only able to craft more basic items like pickaxes and shovels. Yet through expanding the town itself with new buildings and upgrades purchased with your earnings, you’ll unlock additional recipes and functionality. This gives a strong sense of progression as you bring prosperity back to your new home.

Central to the experience are the smithing mini-games that turn raw materials into weapons, tools, and accessories. Operating the bellows for the furnace, timing your hammer strikes at the anvil, sharpening blades at the grindstone, and precisely placing shaped pieces into product templates keeps the act of creation involved without growing repetitive or dull. As in real blacksmithing itself, there’s an art to working the metals that translates remarkably well.

Also Read

  • best 2025 games
    Gazettely's 30 Best Video Games of 2025
  • Best Christmas Movies
    30 Best Christmas Movies to Watch This Holiday Season
  • best fantasy movies
    30 Best Fantasy Movies Ever, Ranked: From…
  • Best 2025 Movies
    Gazettely's 30 Best Movies of 2025
  • CloverPit Review
    CloverPit Review: Trading Real Casino Risk for…
  • Len's Island Review
    Len's Island Review: A Diamond in the Rough, With…

While much time is spent at the smithy filling job board orders from various townsfolk in need, you’ll want to regularly embark on quests that further the lighthearted story and unlock additional crafting options. These activities run the gamut from fetch quests to navigating maze-like mines and ancient towers, with some environmental puzzles sprinkled in to exercise more critical thinking skills. It’s a nice change of pace from the rhythms of smithing, giving breathing room before returning to the forge.

Perhaps most impressive is the sheer variety of items available for creation, numbering into the hundreds. From sturdy weapons and tools to accessories and building materials, the diversity ensures crafting never grows stale even after hours at the anvil. Help towns rebuild bridges with processed lumber or try your hand at decorative glass blowing using desert sand. Then take a break at the local tavern you helped erect. It captures that satisfying feeling of utilizing your trade to better the world around you.

With intuitive controls and streamlined interfaces, simplicity and accessibility govern the experience. Yet those hoping for added layers of strategic depth may find the unfailing pacing and difficulty plateauing after the first few hours. Thankfully, judicious use of upgrades and robust post-game content extends the journey for those not quite ready to douse their forge fires yet.

Adventuring Across the Fantastical Land of Ellian

While the Iron’s Hot transports players to the lush fantasy world of Ellian, a land once legendary for its master craftsmen before its preeminent blacksmith mysteriously vanished. This sets up the main thread that finds your customized character arriving by chance shipwreck to revive the abandoned smithy and return it to its former glory.

While the Iron's Hot Review

The journey will have you traversing across Ellian through a diversity of biomes like dense ancient forests, murky swamps, and frigid rivers that affect gameplay in slight but meaningful ways. Arctic waters may crack and damage tools, for example, incentivizing crafting reinforced variants to access resources. It incentivizes exploration and serves up new crafting materials unique to each vividly-realized environment.

The writing brings warmth and humor to the experience through endearing – if eccentric – characters. As you complete tasks that restore buildings and services to your central home base, it attracts a growing community of colorful NPCs. Drystan, the one-armed former smith who aids your progression with upgrades serves as a particular standout. And the lighthearted escapades with your exploratory guild feel ripe for an ongoing buddy comedy. Their interactions provide memorable between-quest banter without rigidly moving the narrative forward.

While the overarching plot remains straightforward and unobtrusive, side stories with choices that influence outcomes offer welcome narrative depth. These vignettes may reward rare crafting materials or introduce opportunities to customize the look of your equipment. It’s a nice compromise for players more invested in the writing and characters versus those simply looking to zen out through the mastery of blacksmithing systems. Post-game content expands these narrative threads as well, providing reason to remain invested after the credits roll.

If anything, the worldbuilding serves to bolster the crafting gameplay rather than fully stand upright on its own. Yet sprinkles of historical context tying regions and cultures to crafting traditions display attention to detail. And the diversity of people and creatures you encounter reinforce that this fantasy realm has breadth worth exploring beyond its metals and ores. It may not spin epic sagas, but When the Iron is Hot transports you readily to a pleasant land well worth visiting.

A Visual and Auditory Treat

While the Iron’s Hot impresses with its vibrant, pastoral presentation that aptly captures the sights and sounds of living as a fantasy blacksmith. The overhead perspective when navigating the countryside gives way to side-scrolling views when interacting with towns or delving into mines that showcase rich environments flush with colors that pop off the screen. It’s elevated further through small touches like ambient smoke drifting from chimneys and the glow of molten ore during smelting.

While the Iron's Hot Review

Character models are similarly brimming with personality in their exaggerated proportions and vivid outfits. The stout frame and soot-stained apron of your burgeoning blacksmith creates an endearing central figure to guide through the journey while eccentric NPCs like the elder ox Leopold and his grass-munching ways elicit chuckles. Even the cows appear bursting with charm.

What truly impresses is how distinctly each location feels from misty bogs to flat desert scrublands. It immerses you into the diversity of biomes and lends uniqueness to the resources gathered there. The visual and audio presentation even shifts slightly when donning different outfits, adding fuels to the fantasy. And small atmospheric animations within the smithy as you progress through crafting steps enhance the experience.

The laidback soundtrack of gentle guitars and soothing village themes similarly enhance feelings of warmth and community central to crafting titles, transitioning fluidly to more upbeat adventuring ditties when questing farther afield. The audiovisual experience creates palpable satisfaction when your hammer rings out on the anvil.

Controls and UI elements keep comfort and accessibility as the priorities. Menu navigation feels intuitive, with crafted items easily sortable by type or ingredient. The ability to pin desired recipes serves as a nice quality of life touch when pursuing multi-step projects spanning hours. Some limitations around keyboard mapping do seem odd omissions for PC players, however. And screen surfaces can feel somewhat barren at the start, leaving the appealing environments yearning for a touch more liveliness. But minor blemishes do little to tarnish an otherwise slick presentation tailor-made for unwinding across hours of content with users of all ages.

Hours of Post-Story Smithing Await

Players hoping to reach the credits roll in While the Iron is Hot can expect around 15 hours of content through the main storyline. But for those invested in fully upgrading their central village, completing all side quests branches, and crafting every recipe, that playtime can readily double. It makes for a robust core experience even before evaluating the post-game offering.

While the Iron's Hot Review

A standout reason the hours fly by lies with the sense of progression as you accumulate resources to purchase permanent upgrades tied to exploration, harvesting, and crafting efficiency. These meaningful unlocks prevent stagnation from setting in across extended play sessions, providing that “just one more upgrade” drive to keep hammering away. Some may only provide incremental benefits, but they accumulate into tangible improvements.

Of course, the sheer diversity of equipment available to craft also fuels the journey, numbering in the hundreds. Outside item durability issues that plague the early game before acquiring more durable materials, the creative freedom in constructing glass vases, accessories, weapons, and advanced machinery like submarines keeps creativity kindled. And limited inventory space provides steady motivation to sell off goods.

Replay value sees a healthy injection through post-story content that expands the narrative and home village upgrades. Once the credits roll, a lengthy series of additional tasks unfold organically through NPC dialog rather than feeling tacked on. And with new structures like a tavern still left to build, tangible goals keep you returning beyond personal accomplishment.

Additional outfits to discover and crafted item variants also entice completionists while providing collectors compelling reasons to keep fine-tuning creations or seeking alternate materials. It could benefit from more substantive collectibles like lore items, however. And randomly generated town job boards would elevate replayability even further.

But those who’ve grown attached to the world and its inhabitants should find reason enough to linger. Harder difficulty modes add challenge for the crafting veterans as well. When the Iron is Hot may eventually cool as all crafting titles do, but what’s there during its glow should keep wrists working and coins jingling for scores of rewarding hours.

Highlights and Lowlights

While the Iron’s Hot does what the best crafting sandboxes aim for – eliciting simple satisfaction through well-tuned core loops. The minigamesdexterously transform raw materials into items full of purpose and tangible worth for a community in need. Whether smelting, sharpening blades or piecing armor, the smithing itself engraves permanence and progress rarely found in titles focused on destruction. There lies beauty too in how intuitive controls allow quick immersion for blacksmithing apprentices while layered complexities reward veteran craftsmen.

While the Iron's Hot Review

Equally well-realized is the vibrant fantasy land ripe for harvest, lush with charming characters that lend personality to the goods you provide its people, however mundane the overarching stories spun. And post-game content generously extends reasons to linger once the credits roll.

If blemishes appear on While the Iron’s Hot, they originate early when flimsy starter tools snap too frequently disrupting resource gathering flow. Inventory limitations likewise irk in the opening hours before upgrades ease such quibbles. Repetitive fetch quests can also nag those craving more imaginative side stories to drive the smithing journey.

While charming and accessible for all ages, the simplicity in progression systems and difficulty spikes may leave hardcore crafters desiring more strategic dimensions to separate the apprentices from legendary masters. And with crafting as the crowning jewel, those merely hoping to just dabble between story beats may find the repetitive nature of creation wears thin despite the backing of those charismatic cows.

Yet slim shortcomings barely dull the sheen of a honed product perfect for unwinding across hours with nourishing positivity. The warm embrace of its community and fundamentally gratifying act of craftsmanship proves only the grindiest gamers may feel their skills outpacing the efforts required. When the Iron’s Hot smartly sticks to its simmering strengths while avoiding half-baked ideas that could detract from its wholesome nature. In an industry too often focused on leveraging violence and competition, this crafting title brims with much needed cozy vibes.

An Accessible Fantasy Crafting Treat

At its glowing heart, While the Iron is Hot transports players into a pleasant pastoral existence as a rising blacksmith in a charming fantasy land. Through well-tuned crafting systems and a diverse array of minigames, it neatly captures the meditative joys of creation and progress intrinsic to the profession. Supporting elements like the humorously written NPCs, vibrant visual presentation, and light experimentation well outside the forge further bolster the experience.

While the Iron's Hot Review

Sure, the overarching plotline treads familiar ground about restoring a forgotten craft to its former glory. And those seeking evolving strategic complexity may find the straightforward grind wearing thin after several hours. Yet in avoiding overstuffing the experience with extraneous features that could detract from highly polished core systems, When the Iron’s Hot smartly plays to its strengths as an unwinding life sim.

Fans of Animal Crossing eager for more game-like objectives or those pining for the complex production chains of leading crafting sims like Craft the World may walk away wanting more. But by honing an inviting gameplay loop free of combat, it carves out a cozy niche perfect for younger audiences or even veterans looking to lose themselves in simple creative escapism.

Stacking up nicely against contemporaries in the non-violent simulation genre like Cozy Grove and Spirit of the Island, When the Iron is Hot manages to invoke smiles through nearly every play session – an impressive accomplishment given the repetitive nature of crafting systems. That it achieve such Feats without combat like the similarly appealing Moonlighter or action-RPG trappings of My Time at Sandrock speaks further still to the mastery of its craft and wholesome nature.

So while it likely won’t go down as an all-time classic, When the Iron is Hot still deserves commendation for the glow it brings to the chill simulation genre. Its family-friendly world-building, accessibility and proudly pacifistic sensibilities serve as a testament that not every worthwhile game need revolve around besting enemies. Instead, it empowers creativity in users of all skill levels. And that uplifting message itself proves rewarding enough to make this crafting game worth playing for gamers young and old alike.

The Review

While the Iron's Hot

8 Score

While the Iron's Hot delivers a wonderfully peaceful crafting adventure centered around living the blacksmith life. Its minigame-driven loop, vibrant fantasy setting, and focus on restoring rather than destroying excellently capture the meditative joys of creation. A few repetitive elements and limited depth for serious crafters hold it back from forging true greatness, but with accessibility and charm in abundance, When the Iron is Hot remains worthy of any gamer's time - young or old.

PROS

  • Satisfying core crafting loop with engaging blacksmithing minigames
  • Charming fantasy setting and endearing characters
  • Strong visual and audio presentation that fits the theme
  • Solid progression system with meaningful town-building upgrades
  • Good amount of content and post-game activities
  • Welcoming gameplay for gamers of all skill levels

CONS

  • Story is a bit generic and forgettable
  • Some repetitive fetch quests bog down pacing
  • Can feel too simple and easy for experienced gamers
  • Needs more interesting endgame challenges and collectibles
  • Durability system leads to annoyance early on before upgrades
  • Lack of customization in the central smithing sequence

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: Action gameAdventureAdventure gameBontemps GamesFeaturedHumble BundleUnityWhile the Iron's Hot
Previous Post

Pokémon Concierge Review: Stop-Motion Pet Simulator Perfection

Next Post

Steam’s Top Tiers: Unveiling the Most Played Games of 2023

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Rogue Trooper Review

    Rogue Trooper Review: Duncan Jones Finds Pulp Life on Nu Earth

    2 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Ride or Die Review: Best Friends Outrun a Messy Conspiracy

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Westies Review: Hell’s Kitchen Serves Another Cold-Blooded Crime Saga

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • I’m Not Afraid Review: Childhood Pays for Adult Desperation

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • One Piece: Heroines Review: Nami Takes the Runway

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Little House on the Prairie Review: Netflix Builds a Handsome, Uneasy Home

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Sentinels Review: Super Soldiers Sink Into the Mud

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

The Odyssey Review
Movies

The Odyssey Review: Christopher Nolan Turns Homecoming Into Judgment

8 hours ago
Lucky Review
TV Shows

Lucky Review: Anya Taylor-Joy Runs Faster Than the Story

15 hours ago
The Man Will Burn Review
TV Shows

The Man Will Burn Review: Who Owns the Fire?

1 day ago
Ride or Die Review
TV Shows

Ride or Die Review: Best Friends Outrun a Messy Conspiracy

2 days ago
House of the Dragon Season 3 Episode 4 Review
TV Shows

House of the Dragon Season 3 Episode 4 Review: Daeron Learns the Wrong Lesson

2 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Which of Alfred Hitchcock's 1960s thrillers is your all-time favorite?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2026 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely