Starfield: Shattered Space Review - A Focused but Flawed Expansion

Sarah Mitchell February 14, 2026 reviews
StarfieldShattered SpaceBethesdaRPGDLC

Bethesda's first major expansion for Starfield takes a different approach from the base game's galaxy-spanning exploration. Shattered Space confines players to a single handcrafted location—the House Va'ruun homeworld of Va'ruun'kai—and attempts to deliver a more focused, narrative-driven experience. After 15 hours with the expansion, I'm left with mixed feelings about this shift in direction.

A Singular Focus

Unlike the base game's procedurally generated planets, Va'ruun'kai is entirely handcrafted. The planet features diverse biomes, from crystalline caves to twisted forests affected by gravitational anomalies. The attention to environmental detail is immediately apparent, with landmarks that feel purposefully placed rather than randomly generated.

The capital city of Dazra serves as the expansion's hub, a sprawling settlement built into canyon walls. The architecture reflects House Va'ruun's religious devotion to the Great Serpent, with serpentine motifs and imposing temples. The city feels more alive than most Starfield settlements, with NPCs following schedules and reacting to your actions throughout the story.

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Photo by cottonbro studio / Pexels

Horror Elements and Atmosphere

Shattered Space leans into horror more than any previous Bethesda expansion. The main questline involves investigating a catastrophic experiment that tore holes in reality, unleashing otherworldly entities called Vortex Horrors. These encounters are genuinely unsettling, with reality-warping effects and disturbing enemy designs.

The atmosphere is the expansion's strongest element. Exploring abandoned facilities with flickering lights and distorted audio creates genuine tension. Environmental storytelling through terminals and audio logs reveals the horrifying consequences of House Va'ruun's experiments. The sound design deserves particular praise, with unsettling ambient noise that kept me on edge.

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Photo by Nothing Ahead / Pexels

Story and Characters

The narrative follows your investigation into the Vortex incident while navigating House Va'ruun's political factions. The story explores themes of religious fanaticism, scientific hubris, and the cost of blind faith. While conceptually interesting, the execution is uneven.

Key characters like Anasko Va'ruun and Zealot Ekris are well-voiced and written, but many supporting NPCs feel underdeveloped. The faction politics that should drive tension often feel superficial, with conflicts resolved too easily. The main questline is shorter than expected, clocking in at 8-10 hours, with side content padding the expansion to 15-20 hours total.

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Photo by Stanislav Kondratiev / Pexels

Gameplay Improvements

Shattered Space introduces new weapons and equipment themed around House Va'ruun's technology. The Va'ruun Inflictor rifle uses gravitational manipulation to devastating effect, while the Vortex Grenade creates temporary singularities. These additions are fun but don't fundamentally change combat.

The expansion adds new enemy types beyond the Vortex Horrors, including mutated wildlife and zealot variants with unique abilities. Boss encounters are more elaborate than the base game, featuring multi-phase fights with environmental hazards. However, the combat still suffers from Starfield's fundamental issues with enemy AI and gunplay feel.

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Photo by Pavel Danilyuk / Pexels

Exploration and Side Content

Va'ruun'kai offers more engaging exploration than typical Starfield planets. Handcrafted locations include abandoned research stations, hidden shrines, and underground caverns with environmental puzzles. The reduced scale allows for more meaningful discoveries, with unique rewards rather than generic loot.

Side quests are a mixed bag. Some feature interesting moral dilemmas and branching outcomes, while others devolve into fetch quests or combat gauntlets. The best side content involves investigating the personal stories of Va'ruun citizens affected by the Vortex incident, providing emotional weight to the catastrophe.

Technical Performance

On PC with a high-end system, Shattered Space runs similarly to the base game—generally smooth with occasional stuttering in dense areas. The handcrafted environments are more visually impressive than procedural planets, with better lighting and more detailed textures. Load times remain frequent when entering buildings, breaking immersion during exploration.

I encountered several bugs during my playthrough, including quest markers pointing to incorrect locations and NPCs getting stuck in geometry. None were game-breaking, but they're disappointing given Bethesda's time to polish since launch.

Missed Opportunities

Shattered Space's biggest issue is its conservative design. The expansion doesn't address Starfield's fundamental problems—the disconnected fast-travel-heavy structure, shallow faction systems, or unsatisfying space combat. It simply provides more content within the existing framework.

The horror elements, while atmospheric, never fully commit. The expansion pulls back from truly disturbing content, resulting in a tone that's creepy but not frightening. More aggressive horror design could have differentiated Shattered Space from typical Bethesda fare.

The confined setting is both strength and weakness. While the handcrafted world is more engaging than procedural planets, it limits the sense of discovery that defines Bethesda games. Players expecting to explore multiple new systems will be disappointed by the singular focus.

Value Proposition

At $29.99, Shattered Space offers 15-20 hours of content for completionists. The quality of that content varies significantly—the main quest and best side missions justify the price, but filler content and technical issues diminish the value. Players who bounced off Starfield's base game won't find enough innovation here to change their minds.

Final Verdict

Shattered Space is a competent but unremarkable expansion that plays it safe. The handcrafted world and horror atmosphere are welcome changes from the base game's formula, but the conservative design and short length prevent it from being essential. Starfield fans will enjoy the focused experience and lore expansion, but those hoping for transformative improvements will be disappointed. It's a solid addition that doesn't quite reach its potential.

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