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Game Dev Story and more Kairosoft manage ‘em ups are now on SteamSave you from squinting at your phone

Save you from squinting at your phone

A screenshot of Game Dev Story showing an office of people at computers, with several people seemingly on fire.

I think the first mobile game I ever bought wasGame Dev Story, Kairosoft’s smash-hit lightweight management game about running a video game studio. I think the second mobile game I bought was probably one of its follow-ups, too. So I’m feeling all sorts of nostalgic as I see Game Dev Story and four other vintage Kairosoft manage ‘em ups have arrived on Steam.Game Dev StoryWatch on YouTubeOn Monday, Kairosoft Steam versions of Game Dev Story,Hot Springs Story,Dungeon Village,Station Manager, andDream House Days DX. While Game Dev originated on Windows way back in the 90s, mostly these are the PC debut for games originally released on pocket telephones.Game Dev Story has you run a games studio, hiring staff and allocating resources to create games, hoping to find hits (rated on the four metrics everyone knows: Graphics, Sound, Originality, and Fun, as every review of course uses) and maybe eventually launch your own console. Hot Springs Story expands that into running a hot spring resort, building amenities and such. Dungeon Village gives that an RPG twist, building a fantasy village to attract and house adventurers who’ll go out and duff stuff up for treasure. Station Manager has you build and decorate a fancy train station. And Dream House is about running and decorating apartment blocks.Sorry, cute dragon: I need the treasure in your guts.I like their style of management games. They’re simple and gentle but it’s satisfying when things go right. Also, it’s fun to create things with silly names. They’re all quite similar beyond Game Dev so hey, start with whichever theme most appeals to you?The games areavailable now on Steam, each with a regular price of £9/€10/$12. Some have launch discounts making them cheaper right now.You might see that some early reviews complained about keyboard input not working. That was a bug, which Kairosoft havefixed and apologised for. They’ve also sinceadded options to remap keyboard controls. But it still sounds like they’re pretty scrappy PC editions.

I think the first mobile game I ever bought wasGame Dev Story, Kairosoft’s smash-hit lightweight management game about running a video game studio. I think the second mobile game I bought was probably one of its follow-ups, too. So I’m feeling all sorts of nostalgic as I see Game Dev Story and four other vintage Kairosoft manage ‘em ups have arrived on Steam.Game Dev StoryWatch on YouTubeOn Monday, Kairosoft Steam versions of Game Dev Story,Hot Springs Story,Dungeon Village,Station Manager, andDream House Days DX. While Game Dev originated on Windows way back in the 90s, mostly these are the PC debut for games originally released on pocket telephones.Game Dev Story has you run a games studio, hiring staff and allocating resources to create games, hoping to find hits (rated on the four metrics everyone knows: Graphics, Sound, Originality, and Fun, as every review of course uses) and maybe eventually launch your own console. Hot Springs Story expands that into running a hot spring resort, building amenities and such. Dungeon Village gives that an RPG twist, building a fantasy village to attract and house adventurers who’ll go out and duff stuff up for treasure. Station Manager has you build and decorate a fancy train station. And Dream House is about running and decorating apartment blocks.Sorry, cute dragon: I need the treasure in your guts.I like their style of management games. They’re simple and gentle but it’s satisfying when things go right. Also, it’s fun to create things with silly names. They’re all quite similar beyond Game Dev so hey, start with whichever theme most appeals to you?The games areavailable now on Steam, each with a regular price of £9/€10/$12. Some have launch discounts making them cheaper right now.You might see that some early reviews complained about keyboard input not working. That was a bug, which Kairosoft havefixed and apologised for. They’ve also sinceadded options to remap keyboard controls. But it still sounds like they’re pretty scrappy PC editions.

I think the first mobile game I ever bought wasGame Dev Story, Kairosoft’s smash-hit lightweight management game about running a video game studio. I think the second mobile game I bought was probably one of its follow-ups, too. So I’m feeling all sorts of nostalgic as I see Game Dev Story and four other vintage Kairosoft manage ‘em ups have arrived on Steam.

Game Dev StoryWatch on YouTube

Game Dev Story

Cover image for YouTube video

On Monday, Kairosoft Steam versions of Game Dev Story,Hot Springs Story,Dungeon Village,Station Manager, andDream House Days DX. While Game Dev originated on Windows way back in the 90s, mostly these are the PC debut for games originally released on pocket telephones.

Game Dev Story has you run a games studio, hiring staff and allocating resources to create games, hoping to find hits (rated on the four metrics everyone knows: Graphics, Sound, Originality, and Fun, as every review of course uses) and maybe eventually launch your own console. Hot Springs Story expands that into running a hot spring resort, building amenities and such. Dungeon Village gives that an RPG twist, building a fantasy village to attract and house adventurers who’ll go out and duff stuff up for treasure. Station Manager has you build and decorate a fancy train station. And Dream House is about running and decorating apartment blocks.

Sorry, cute dragon: I need the treasure in your guts.

Beating up a cute dragon in a Dungeon Village screenshot.

I like their style of management games. They’re simple and gentle but it’s satisfying when things go right. Also, it’s fun to create things with silly names. They’re all quite similar beyond Game Dev so hey, start with whichever theme most appeals to you?

The games areavailable now on Steam, each with a regular price of £9/€10/$12. Some have launch discounts making them cheaper right now.

You might see that some early reviews complained about keyboard input not working. That was a bug, which Kairosoft havefixed and apologised for. They’ve also sinceadded options to remap keyboard controls. But it still sounds like they’re pretty scrappy PC editions.