Compara los precios de FANTASY LIFE i: The Girl Who Steals Time en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por LEVEL5 Inc.. Publicado por LEVEL5 Inc.. Lanzado el 21/5/2025. Disponible en PC, Xbox. Géneros: RPG.

Fourteen jobs, a time-traveling dragon mystery, roguelite dungeons, and island terraforming in one package. Cozy enough for Stardew fans, deep enough to swallow a hundred hours.

My first instinct when I heard the pitch was skepticism. A life-sim with 14 swappable jobs, open-world exploration, town-building, AND roguelite dungeons? That reads like a Kickstarter bingo card, not a finished game. But after sinking serious time into it on PC, I can tell you the thing actually coheres. Fantasy Life i: The Girl Who Steals Time is the rare hybrid that uses its own overstuffed nature as a design strength rather than a liability. The loop keeps pivoting just before any single system wears out its welcome, and that rhythm is genuinely hard to resist. The backbone is the Lives system: 14 job classes split across Combat (Paladin, Mercenary, Hunter, Magician), Gathering (Angler, Miner, Woodcutter, Farmer, and others), and Crafting (Cook, Blacksmith, Carpenter, Tailor, Alchemist, Artist). You can switch freely on the fly once unlocked, and the PC version even auto-swaps you to Miner when you approach an ore vein, which is a small quality-of-life touch that makes hour-to-hour play feel frictionless. Each Life has its own skill tree and SP economy, so there is a real progression spine underneath the cozy exterior. Combat lives use light attacks, heavy attacks, dodge rolls, and class-specific specials, though the honest assessment is that most standard encounters are pretty forgiving and button-mashy. Difficulty spikes do appear when you are under-levelled, so the grind is not entirely toothless, but do not come in expecting Souls-style precision. The crafting and gathering loops have their own satisfying rhythm, with resource evaluation mechanics and charged-action windows that reward paying attention. The narrative wrapper involves time travel between the present-day ruined island and the same island a thousand years in the past, chasing the mystery behind a bone dragon and a girl named Rem who sends a plea across time. It is charming rather than gripping. The writing skews whimsical and cartoon-light, the characters are endearing in a Saturday-morning-anime way, and the main plot twists are telegraphed well in advance. For those of us who need a story to feel invested, this is the weakest pillar. The world is not doing Disco Elysium-style layered text, and nobody here has a Harold-shaped hole in their soul. What it does have is consistent tone and a cast that earns low-stakes affection. The companion system, where you rescue NPCs who join your party to fight, gather, or fish alongside you, adds warmth without going as far as romance or deep personal arcs, which feels like a missed opportunity given how much screen time some characters get. The roguelite dungeon mode, added via the Version 2.0 update (called Snoozaland), gives the late game a welcome injection of randomness and replayability. The island terraforming and base-building layer borrows Animal Crossing DNA without apology, and it works. Co-op supports up to four players online with cross-platform play, but the implementation is the game's most criticized aspect: session time limits, restricted quest progression during multiplayer, and the inability to freely use your settlement with friends all undercut what should be a selling point. Post-launch patches have addressed some quest-progress issues, but solo remains the intended way to experience the core loop. On PC specifically, the Unreal Engine 5 presentation is polished, cutscenes cap at 60fps (non-interactive so it barely matters), voice acting is sparse to the point of near-silence, and the option to disable depth-of-field blur on PC is a small but appreciated touch over console versions. Nobuo Uematsu's involvement in the soundtrack is not a trivial detail either: the music does real heavy lifting for the atmosphere. This is a game for players who find satisfaction in making numbers climb across multiple parallel skill trees, who want a world that appreciates their presence without demanding combat mastery, and who are fine with a story that exists mostly to hand them a reason to keep exploring. If you need branching moral choices, dialogue weight, or RPG systems that evolve meaningfully past hour 40, you will run into a ceiling. If you just want a beautifully produced world to disappear into across a very long weekend, Fantasy Life i will deliver without complaint. Monika, Scout Team

FANTASY LIFE i: The Girl Who Steals Time

FANTASY LIFE i: The Girl Who Steals Time

21 may 2025LEVEL5 Inc.
GamerScout opina

Fourteen jobs, a time-traveling dragon mystery, roguelite dungeons, and island terraforming in one package. Cozy enough for Stardew fans, deep enough to swallow a hundred hours.

PCXbox
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Mínimo histórico: €30.00

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My first instinct when I heard the pitch was skepticism. A life-sim with 14 swappable jobs, open-world exploration, town-building, AND roguelite dungeons? That reads like a Kickstarter bingo card, not a finished game. But after sinking serious time into it on PC, I can tell you the thing actually coheres. Fantasy Life i: The Girl Who Steals Time is the rare hybrid that uses its own overstuffed nature as a design strength rather than a liability. The loop keeps pivoting just before any single system wears out its welcome, and that rhythm is genuinely hard to resist. The backbone is the Lives system: 14 job classes split across Combat (Paladin, Mercenary, Hunter, Magician), Gathering (Angler, Miner, Woodcutter, Farmer, and others), and Crafting (Cook, Blacksmith, Carpenter, Tailor, Alchemist, Artist). You can switch freely on the fly once unlocked, and the PC version even auto-swaps you to Miner when you approach an ore vein, which is a small quality-of-life touch that makes hour-to-hour play feel frictionless. Each Life has its own skill tree and SP economy, so there is a real progression spine underneath the cozy exterior. Combat lives use light attacks, heavy attacks, dodge rolls, and class-specific specials, though the honest assessment is that most standard encounters are pretty forgiving and button-mashy. Difficulty spikes do appear when you are under-levelled, so the grind is not entirely toothless, but do not come in expecting Souls-style precision. The crafting and gathering loops have their own satisfying rhythm, with resource evaluation mechanics and charged-action windows that reward paying attention. The narrative wrapper involves time travel between the present-day ruined island and the same island a thousand years in the past, chasing the mystery behind a bone dragon and a girl named Rem who sends a plea across time. It is charming rather than gripping. The writing skews whimsical and cartoon-light, the characters are endearing in a Saturday-morning-anime way, and the main plot twists are telegraphed well in advance. For those of us who need a story to feel invested, this is the weakest pillar. The world is not doing Disco Elysium-style layered text, and nobody here has a Harold-shaped hole in their soul. What it does have is consistent tone and a cast that earns low-stakes affection. The companion system, where you rescue NPCs who join your party to fight, gather, or fish alongside you, adds warmth without going as far as romance or deep personal arcs, which feels like a missed opportunity given how much screen time some characters get. The roguelite dungeon mode, added via the Version 2.0 update (called Snoozaland), gives the late game a welcome injection of randomness and replayability. The island terraforming and base-building layer borrows Animal Crossing DNA without apology, and it works. Co-op supports up to four players online with cross-platform play, but the implementation is the game's most criticized aspect: session time limits, restricted quest progression during multiplayer, and the inability to freely use your settlement with friends all undercut what should be a selling point. Post-launch patches have addressed some quest-progress issues, but solo remains the intended way to experience the core loop. On PC specifically, the Unreal Engine 5 presentation is polished, cutscenes cap at 60fps (non-interactive so it barely matters), voice acting is sparse to the point of near-silence, and the option to disable depth-of-field blur on PC is a small but appreciated touch over console versions. Nobuo Uematsu's involvement in the soundtrack is not a trivial detail either: the music does real heavy lifting for the atmosphere. This is a game for players who find satisfaction in making numbers climb across multiple parallel skill trees, who want a world that appreciates their presence without demanding combat mastery, and who are fine with a story that exists mostly to hand them a reason to keep exploring. If you need branching moral choices, dialogue weight, or RPG systems that evolve meaningfully past hour 40, you will run into a ceiling. If you just want a beautifully produced world to disappear into across a very long weekend, Fantasy Life i will deliver without complaint.

Monika
Monika · Scout Team

RPGs

Etiquetas

singleplayermultiplayercooponline-coopcross-platformachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:aaaLife-Sim RPGJob SystemRoguelite DungeonIsland BuildingTime Travel StoryNobuo Uematsu SoundtrackGrind-FriendlyCross-Platform Co-opParty Companion System

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 10 64bit / Windows 11 64bit
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
20 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 750Ti(2GB) / AMD Radeon R7 370(2GB)
Processor
Intel Core i3-3225 / AMD A10-7850K
Sound Card
DirectX compatible soundcard / Onboard chipset

Recomendados

OS
Windows 10 64bit / Windows 11 64bit
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
20 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060(3GB) / AMD Radeon RX570(4GB)
Processor
Intel Core i7-4770K / AMD Ryzen 5 1600
Sound Card
DirectX compatible soundcard / Onboard chipset

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
LEVEL5 Inc.
Distribuidora
LEVEL5 Inc.
Fecha de lanzamiento
21 may 2025

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible FANTASY LIFE i: The Girl Who Steals Time?

FANTASY LIFE i: The Girl Who Steals Time está disponible en PC, Xbox.

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FANTASY LIFE i: The Girl Who Steals Time se lanzó el 21 de mayo de 2025.

¿Quién desarrolló FANTASY LIFE i: The Girl Who Steals Time?

FANTASY LIFE i: The Girl Who Steals Time fue desarrollado por LEVEL5 Inc..