Compare BUNNY GARDEN 2 prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by qureate. Published by qureate. Released on 4/15/2026. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie.

A hostess-bar life sim with six voiced characters, a surprisingly bittersweet resource loop, and ASMR scenes that you probably shouldn't stream at work.

I find something quietly fascinating about games that weaponize mundane desperation as a core mechanic, and Bunny Garden 2 does exactly that. Your protagonist, Haito Kanda (rename him if you like), has just torpedoed his career and is basically selling his furniture to fund weekend visits to a hostess club. The bar is only open on Saturdays and Sundays, so the weekday stretch becomes a scrappy life-sim layer: part-time jobs, flea-market sales of your own belongings, occasional gambling, and even a moment where your mother sends you pocket money. The developers seem genuinely aware of how melancholy that all sounds, and there is a dry, self-aware sting to watching your apartment gradually empty out as you grind for another night at the club. Once inside Bunny Garden itself, the loop is warmer. You order drinks and snacks, choose menu items that match each hostess's preferences to build Affection, and manage a Mood and Drunkenness system that unlocks softer, more candid sides of each character as the evening wears on. The six-heroine roster feels genuinely varied: returning faces Kana, Rin, and Miuka bring familiar dynamics, while newcomers Erisa (a classic tsundere on her trial period), Kuon (enigmatic and deliberately evasive), and Runa (cheeky, a little devilish) each have their own reading rhythm. Minigames have been upgraded from the original, with a spatial-audio Blindfolded Tag mode that leans into the ASMR production values the series is known for, and photo sessions now support two cast members at once. There are also off-hours outings, overnight trips, and a group-date mode where all six characters interact simultaneously, which adds a social-management wrinkle that the first game lacked entirely. Where the game strains is in its economy. The gap between what visits cost and what legitimate income generates can feel punishing if you play vanilla, and some players have already noted that the gambling minigame in particular is repetitive enough to tempt save-scumming. The Affection system rewards patience and gift variety, but has diminishing returns on repeated presents, so completionists chasing all CG and good endings will want a guide or a very careful eye on character preferences each week. The per-character signature songs and the ASMR scenes are unmistakably the production heart of this title, and qureate's voice casting (several actors with roots in idol and life-sim anime games) lands with obvious care. If you played the first Bunny Garden and wanted more depth, more routes, and a slightly darker emotional texture around the edges, this sequel delivers on all three counts without reinventing the formula. Bunny Garden 2 is a narrow game made with real craft for an audience that knows exactly what it wants. It will not convert skeptics, but fans of the hostess-sim subgenre, adult visual novels with genuine character writing, or anyone who found the original's life-sim undertow unexpectedly moving will feel right at home here. The bittersweet resource loop, the quiet apartment slowly stripped of furniture, the way each heroine reveals herself in layers as the nights accumulate: there is a specific, unhurried tenderness to the whole thing that you rarely find in bigger productions. Kai, Scout Team

BUNNY GARDEN 2
AdventureCasualIndie

BUNNY GARDEN 2

Apr 15, 2026qureate
GamerScout Says

A hostess-bar life sim with six voiced characters, a surprisingly bittersweet resource loop, and ASMR scenes that you probably shouldn't stream at work.

PC
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About BUNNY GARDEN 2

I find something quietly fascinating about games that weaponize mundane desperation as a core mechanic, and Bunny Garden 2 does exactly that. Your protagonist, Haito Kanda (rename him if you like), has just torpedoed his career and is basically selling his furniture to fund weekend visits to a hostess club. The bar is only open on Saturdays and Sundays, so the weekday stretch becomes a scrappy life-sim layer: part-time jobs, flea-market sales of your own belongings, occasional gambling, and even a moment where your mother sends you pocket money. The developers seem genuinely aware of how melancholy that all sounds, and there is a dry, self-aware sting to watching your apartment gradually empty out as you grind for another night at the club. Once inside Bunny Garden itself, the loop is warmer. You order drinks and snacks, choose menu items that match each hostess's preferences to build Affection, and manage a Mood and Drunkenness system that unlocks softer, more candid sides of each character as the evening wears on. The six-heroine roster feels genuinely varied: returning faces Kana, Rin, and Miuka bring familiar dynamics, while newcomers Erisa (a classic tsundere on her trial period), Kuon (enigmatic and deliberately evasive), and Runa (cheeky, a little devilish) each have their own reading rhythm. Minigames have been upgraded from the original, with a spatial-audio Blindfolded Tag mode that leans into the ASMR production values the series is known for, and photo sessions now support two cast members at once. There are also off-hours outings, overnight trips, and a group-date mode where all six characters interact simultaneously, which adds a social-management wrinkle that the first game lacked entirely. Where the game strains is in its economy. The gap between what visits cost and what legitimate income generates can feel punishing if you play vanilla, and some players have already noted that the gambling minigame in particular is repetitive enough to tempt save-scumming. The Affection system rewards patience and gift variety, but has diminishing returns on repeated presents, so completionists chasing all CG and good endings will want a guide or a very careful eye on character preferences each week. The per-character signature songs and the ASMR scenes are unmistakably the production heart of this title, and qureate's voice casting (several actors with roots in idol and life-sim anime games) lands with obvious care. If you played the first Bunny Garden and wanted more depth, more routes, and a slightly darker emotional texture around the edges, this sequel delivers on all three counts without reinventing the formula. Bunny Garden 2 is a narrow game made with real craft for an audience that knows exactly what it wants. It will not convert skeptics, but fans of the hostess-sim subgenre, adult visual novels with genuine character writing, or anyone who found the original's life-sim undertow unexpectedly moving will feel right at home here. The bittersweet resource loop, the quiet apartment slowly stripped of furniture, the way each heroine reveals herself in layers as the nights accumulate: there is a specific, unhurried tenderness to the whole thing that you rarely find in bigger productions. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:sub-5Hostess SimAffection SystemMultiple RoutesASMR ContentLife Sim EconomyCharacter RoutesVoiced CastGroup Date EventsCompletionist CG Hunting

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 / 11 64-bit
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
8 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 SUPER (4GB) or AMD Radeon RX 5500 XT (4GB)
Processor
Intel Core i5-8400 or AMD Ryzen 5 2600
Sound Card
DirectX Compatible Sound Device

Recommended

OS
Windows 11 64bit
Memory
16 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Storage
8 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 or AMD Radeon RX 7600
Processor
Intel Core i5-12400 or AMD Ryzen 5 5600X
Sound Card
DirectX Compatible Sound Device

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Game Info

Developer
qureate
Publisher
qureate
Release Date
Apr 15, 2026

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What platforms is BUNNY GARDEN 2 available on?

BUNNY GARDEN 2 is available on PC.

When was BUNNY GARDEN 2 released?

BUNNY GARDEN 2 was released on 15 April 2026.

Who developed BUNNY GARDEN 2?

BUNNY GARDEN 2 was developed by qureate.