Videos by ComicBook.com
Starfinder: Afterlight began its journey on Kickstarter, with a successful campaign in late 2025. Like Baldur’s Gate 3, this upcoming CRPG gets its roots from an existing tabletop RPG system. In this case, we’re talking about Starfinder, Paizo’s intergalactic sci-fi companion to fantasy RPG Pathfinder. Whether or not you’ve had the pleasure of playing the sci-fi TTRPG, you should definitely keep an eye out for Starfinder: Afterlight if you love a good turn-based RPG. Here’s why.
This Will Be the First CRPG Inspired by the Starfinder System, And It Shouldn’t Be The Last

Following the success of its fantasy TTRPG, Pathfinder, Paizo released Starfinder back in 2017. This sci-fi/fantasy hybrid TTRPG is an extension of the Pathfinder universe, using similar systems and lore, but with a more futuristic setting. If you haven’t yet had the pleasure of playing Starfinder, think Star Wars or Warhammer 40K, but in TTRPG form. It’s a popular TTRPG system, especially for fans of science fiction and Pathfinder‘s world of Golarion. And yet, it hasn’t had a video game adaptation… until now.
Pathfinder itself has seen a few video games, including Owlcat’s Pathfinder: Kingmaker and Pathfinder: Wrath of the Righteous. But Starfinder: Afterlight will be the first CRPG to use the sci-fi TTRPG’s world and system. Given how great CRPG translations of Dungeons & Dragons and Pathfinder have proved themselves to be, this could well be the next big sci-fi RPG release. And hopefully, it could spawn a whole series of Starfinder CRPGs in the vein of the Pathfinder and Dungeons & Dragons gaming universes we already have.
Starfinder: Afterlight billed itself as “Divinity: Original Sin meets Guardians of the Galaxy” in its successful Kickstarter campaign. It aspires to bring players into a world where “magic and lasers collide.” The game will adapt the Starfinder system, letting players craft their character using 2nd edition ancestries and classes. Combat will be turn-based and follow the 3-turn action economy used in the TTRPG. In this way, it will likely satisfy that Baldur’s Gate 3 itch while introducing players to the futuristic world of Golarion. If you couldn’t tell, I’m a pretty big Paizo fan, and even if sci-fi isn’t my top genre for an RPG, this one has my vote of interest. And clearly, I’m not alone.
Starfinder: Afterlight Flew Past Its Kickstarter Goal at Warp Speed









