Compare 12 Labours of Hercules V: Kids of Hellas (Platinum Edition) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Jetdogs Studios. Published by Jetdogs Studios. Released on 6/17/2016. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Casual, Indie, Strategy.

Fifty-plus levels of mythology-flavored time management for players who want their brain on autopilot but their mouse clicking fast. Soft enough for newcomers, thin enough to frustrate anyone chasing deep strategy.

My spreadsheet instincts told me to expect more depth here than actually exists, so let me save you the false hope early: Kids of Hellas is a casual time-management game first and a strategy game a distant second. The fifth entry in Jetdogs' long-running series, it sits comfortably in the formula the studio has been refining since the original: send two to four workers across a level map, gather food, wood, and other resources, spend those resources to clear road obstacles, and unlock the next segment until the level objective is met. Hercules himself steps in for heavy lifting like shoving giant boulders and golems out of the path, while Megara lends support on the side. New additions this time include two-positional switches, gift boxes that load up your bonus bar, and Codrus the woodcutter as a fresh special-unit ally. None of these overhaul the loop, but they add just enough texture to distinguish entry five from entry four. The difficulty question is where things get complicated. Three modes exist: Casual (no timer, no score), Normal (timer active), and Expert (faster timer). On Casual the game is genuinely child-friendly, bright-coloured, and nearly impossible to fail. Even on Normal, Kids of Hellas is noticeably easier than its predecessors in the series, with more forgiving level layouts, fewer thief encounters that can drain your stockpiles, and no resource cost on Hercules and Megara's special actions. The strategy-game label in the genre tags is not wrong, but it is generous. The real challenge lives in the bonus system: an energy bar that charges as you play and unlocks temporary power-ups like a speed boost for workers, a resource multiplier, a time freeze, or a temporary extra worker. Positioning your workers to feed that bar efficiently while keeping your resource chain from stalling is the closest this game comes to a genuinely interesting decision layer. For genre veterans, that decision layer will feel thin. Community reviewers consistently flag the repetitive objectives and the lack of mechanical innovation compared to earlier entries. There are reports of occasional stuck-worker bugs that can softlock a level, which is a real frustration when you are racing a timer on Expert. The soundtrack and visuals are unchanged from previous entries, which is either comforting familiarity or recycled assets depending on your tolerance for series sameness. What the game does well is pacing: levels run five to fifteen minutes each, the 50-plus stage count (including a bonus episode with its own storyline) adds up to roughly 15 hours for a completionist run, and the achievement list is clean with nothing missable. Here is who should actually buy this. If you are new to the time-management genre, Kids of Hellas is a low-friction entry point. The Casual mode removes all timer pressure, the mechanics are explained clearly, and you will not hit a wall that demands guide-reading. If you already own the earlier games and liked them, entry five delivers more of the same with modest new wrinkles. If you are a strategy player hoping the "Strategy" tag signals something closer to a proper resource-management sim with branching decisions and meaningful build orders, realign those expectations before your cursor gets anywhere near the buy button. Diego, Scout Team

12 Labours of Hercules V: Kids of Hellas (Platinum Edition)
CasualIndieStrategy

12 Labours of Hercules V: Kids of Hellas (Platinum Edition)

Jun 17, 2016Jetdogs Studios
GamerScout Says

Fifty-plus levels of mythology-flavored time management for players who want their brain on autopilot but their mouse clicking fast. Soft enough for newcomers, thin enough to frustrate anyone chasing deep strategy.

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About 12 Labours of Hercules V: Kids of Hellas (Platinum Edition)

My spreadsheet instincts told me to expect more depth here than actually exists, so let me save you the false hope early: Kids of Hellas is a casual time-management game first and a strategy game a distant second. The fifth entry in Jetdogs' long-running series, it sits comfortably in the formula the studio has been refining since the original: send two to four workers across a level map, gather food, wood, and other resources, spend those resources to clear road obstacles, and unlock the next segment until the level objective is met. Hercules himself steps in for heavy lifting like shoving giant boulders and golems out of the path, while Megara lends support on the side. New additions this time include two-positional switches, gift boxes that load up your bonus bar, and Codrus the woodcutter as a fresh special-unit ally. None of these overhaul the loop, but they add just enough texture to distinguish entry five from entry four. The difficulty question is where things get complicated. Three modes exist: Casual (no timer, no score), Normal (timer active), and Expert (faster timer). On Casual the game is genuinely child-friendly, bright-coloured, and nearly impossible to fail. Even on Normal, Kids of Hellas is noticeably easier than its predecessors in the series, with more forgiving level layouts, fewer thief encounters that can drain your stockpiles, and no resource cost on Hercules and Megara's special actions. The strategy-game label in the genre tags is not wrong, but it is generous. The real challenge lives in the bonus system: an energy bar that charges as you play and unlocks temporary power-ups like a speed boost for workers, a resource multiplier, a time freeze, or a temporary extra worker. Positioning your workers to feed that bar efficiently while keeping your resource chain from stalling is the closest this game comes to a genuinely interesting decision layer. For genre veterans, that decision layer will feel thin. Community reviewers consistently flag the repetitive objectives and the lack of mechanical innovation compared to earlier entries. There are reports of occasional stuck-worker bugs that can softlock a level, which is a real frustration when you are racing a timer on Expert. The soundtrack and visuals are unchanged from previous entries, which is either comforting familiarity or recycled assets depending on your tolerance for series sameness. What the game does well is pacing: levels run five to fifteen minutes each, the 50-plus stage count (including a bonus episode with its own storyline) adds up to roughly 15 hours for a completionist run, and the achievement list is clean with nothing missable. Here is who should actually buy this. If you are new to the time-management genre, Kids of Hellas is a low-friction entry point. The Casual mode removes all timer pressure, the mechanics are explained clearly, and you will not hit a wall that demands guide-reading. If you already own the earlier games and liked them, entry five delivers more of the same with modest new wrinkles. If you are a strategy player hoping the "Strategy" tag signals something closer to a proper resource-management sim with branching decisions and meaningful build orders, realign those expectations before your cursor gets anywhere near the buy button. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Time ManagementMouse OnlyMythologyDifficulty ModesAchievement HuntingFamily FriendlyShort SessionsBonus Power-ups

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Unsupported

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP
Memory
512 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
300 MB available space
Graphics
1024x768 resolution
Processor
1.6 GHz
Sound Card
With OpenAL support

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Game Info

Developer
Jetdogs Studios
Publisher
Jetdogs Studios
Release Date
Jun 17, 2016

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Price History

2026-06-103.33(lowest)

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12 Labours of Hercules V: Kids of Hellas (Platinum Edition) is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was 12 Labours of Hercules V: Kids of Hellas (Platinum Edition) released?

12 Labours of Hercules V: Kids of Hellas (Platinum Edition) was released on 17 June 2016.

Who developed 12 Labours of Hercules V: Kids of Hellas (Platinum Edition)?

12 Labours of Hercules V: Kids of Hellas (Platinum Edition) was developed by Jetdogs Studios.