Wheels Echo: The Winter Chronicle

Wheels Echo: The Winter Chronicle

Can my PC run Wheels Echo: The Winter Chronicle

Find out whether your PC can run this game by reviewing the minimum and recommended requirements below.

RAM 8 GB+ Storage 5 GB+ Windows 10

Game Details

Languages
English، French، Italian، German، Spanish - Spain، Polish، Russian، Languages With Full Audio Support
Genre
Action، Adventure، Casual
Category
Single-player، Steam Achievements، Adjustable Text Size، Custom Volume Controls، Narrated Game Menus، Save Anytime، Stereo Sound، Family Sharing
Developer
Frostbyte Studio
Publisher
Frostbyte Studio

Minimum Requirements

CPU
Intel Core i5 6700 / Intel Core i7-6700K / 6700K / 6700 / I7-6700K / 7-6700K
GPU
NVIDIA GTX 1050 Ti / NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti / GTX 1050 / 1050 / GTX 1050 Ti
RAM
8 GB
Storage
5 GB
OS
Windows 10

Recommended Requirements

CPU
AMD Ryzen 5 5600 / 5600 / Intel Core i5-12400F / 12400F / 12400 / I5-12400F
GPU
NVIDIA RTX 3060 / NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 Ti / RTX 3060 / 3060 / AMD RX 6600
RAM
8 GB
Storage
5 GB
OS
Windows 10

Game Description

Wheels Echo 

Is a story-driven winter survival game where your own thoughts shape the journey. You play as Fred Walker, a man who left society decades ago to live alone in a frozen forest. But one winter morning, as he drives toward town for supplies, he finds shattered windows, abandoned roads, strange dates carved into objects… and a world that feels wrong.

What follows is a mystery-driven experience where the main mechanic is not combat or looting — but thinking.

Sit by a campfire, enter Fred’s “thinking state,” listen to his inner voice, and write down his thoughts manually into a physical notebook. What you choose to write — and how you interpret it — determines which quests, clues, jokes, negative tasks, or meaningless scribbles become part of Fred’s story.

Your notebook is the quest system. Your thoughts are the progression.

Out here, no one is coming to save you.

Fred doesn’t meet enemies or allies — he encounters situations.

Some can be avoided. Some must be endured. Some will test his limits.

In a world without people, even animals behave unpredictably.

Survival is not about winning fights, but understanding when — and why — they happen.

The notebook is not a menu. It’s the game.

Fred doesn’t receive quests automatically.
Instead, he reflects on what he sees and hears — and you decide what matters.

When you open the notebook, you’re not checking objectives.
You are shaping Fred’s understanding of the world.

What you choose to write becomes part of the story:

  • quests may appear or never exist

  • clues can gain meaning — or stay meaningless

  • thoughts can turn into jokes, doubts, or negative tasks

The notebook is your interface to the narrative.

The road doesn’t end where the map does.

Fred is not guided by markers or scripted paths.
The world opens gradually — through movement, observation, and curiosity.

Forests stretch far beyond the road.
Abandoned places hide off the beaten path.
Some locations reveal themselves only if you choose to explore — or notice them.

Exploration is not mandatory.
But every step away from safety carries meaning.