Compare Crime Shop Simulator: A Prison Boss Game prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by TREBUCHET. Published by TREBUCHET. Released on 7/10/2025. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Indie, Simulation.

Running a black-market stall in VR sounds chaotic on paper, and it absolutely is in practice. If you want a physics-based crafting loop that punishes sloppy inventory management and rewards a good co-op partner, this one delivers.

My first instinct when loading into Crime Shop Simulator was to treat it like a relaxed shopkeeping idle sim. That instinct gets corrected fast. The game drops you into New Yolk City, a deliberately absurd poultry-themed pastiche of New York where the Mayor has banned everything worth selling, and your job is to run a chain of contraband stalls while the New Yolk Police Department actively sweeps your setup for illegal goods. The core tension, craft fast at night, sell hard during the day, and stash everything the moment a cop shadow appears in the doorway, creates a rhythm that is genuinely more stressful than most casual-tagged games have any right to be. The crafting mechanics are the heart of it. Brewing beer, rolling cigarettes, assembling erotic magazines, and handling the lemonade-to-booze unlock curve all involve physical VR motions rather than button presses, which means your spatial organization matters. Where you place your workstations, where you hide contraband, and how quickly you can clear a hot table when the police arrive are all real decisions with real consequences. Getting caught means merchandise seizure, which is basically the game setting your production schedule on fire. The three-level progression unlocks additional crafting paths and adds pressure to diversify your output to satisfy the city's different customer factions, from laborers to wealthier clientele, each with different preferences. The co-op mode is where the game finds its best form. One player can brew while the other sells and watches the street, and the division of labor creates genuine cooperation rather than two people doing the same thing in parallel. Solo play is fully supported and has its own meditative quality during the prep phases, but the game clearly wants you to bring a partner. Cross-platform co-op between Steam and Quest is a solid practical bonus, since finding a willing accomplice is much easier when you are not locked to one storefront. There are real rough edges. Some players have flagged tracking inconsistencies in VR that can break immersion at the worst moments, and a vocal minority in the community considers the base price steep relative to the content depth. The game also does not push the simulation very far on the strategic layer: there is no complex economy modeling, no faction diplomacy tree, no late-game scaling challenge that a numbers-first player would call deep. What it does instead is nail the kinetic feel of physical VR crafting inside a tightly wound risk-reward loop. The workshop customization, where you can freely reposition furniture to suit your production flow, adds a light base-building dimension that rewards planning without demanding spreadsheets. For strategy and sim players specifically, Crime Shop Simulator sits closer to the Visceral Sim end of the spectrum than the Grand Strategy end. The decisions are spatial and real-time rather than systemic and turn-based. If your comfort zone is Paradox titles or tycoon builders, treat this as a palate cleanser rather than a main course. For VR-curious players who want something with more tension than a cooking sim but less commitment than a full campaign, this is a well-constructed afternoon (or several) with a genuinely funny world wrapped around a crafting loop that holds up past the first hour. Diego, Scout Team

Crime Shop Simulator: A Prison Boss Game
CasualIndieSimulation

Crime Shop Simulator: A Prison Boss Game

Jul 10, 2025TREBUCHET
GamerScout Says

Running a black-market stall in VR sounds chaotic on paper, and it absolutely is in practice. If you want a physics-based crafting loop that punishes sloppy inventory management and rewards a good co-op partner, this one delivers.

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About Crime Shop Simulator: A Prison Boss Game

My first instinct when loading into Crime Shop Simulator was to treat it like a relaxed shopkeeping idle sim. That instinct gets corrected fast. The game drops you into New Yolk City, a deliberately absurd poultry-themed pastiche of New York where the Mayor has banned everything worth selling, and your job is to run a chain of contraband stalls while the New Yolk Police Department actively sweeps your setup for illegal goods. The core tension, craft fast at night, sell hard during the day, and stash everything the moment a cop shadow appears in the doorway, creates a rhythm that is genuinely more stressful than most casual-tagged games have any right to be. The crafting mechanics are the heart of it. Brewing beer, rolling cigarettes, assembling erotic magazines, and handling the lemonade-to-booze unlock curve all involve physical VR motions rather than button presses, which means your spatial organization matters. Where you place your workstations, where you hide contraband, and how quickly you can clear a hot table when the police arrive are all real decisions with real consequences. Getting caught means merchandise seizure, which is basically the game setting your production schedule on fire. The three-level progression unlocks additional crafting paths and adds pressure to diversify your output to satisfy the city's different customer factions, from laborers to wealthier clientele, each with different preferences. The co-op mode is where the game finds its best form. One player can brew while the other sells and watches the street, and the division of labor creates genuine cooperation rather than two people doing the same thing in parallel. Solo play is fully supported and has its own meditative quality during the prep phases, but the game clearly wants you to bring a partner. Cross-platform co-op between Steam and Quest is a solid practical bonus, since finding a willing accomplice is much easier when you are not locked to one storefront. There are real rough edges. Some players have flagged tracking inconsistencies in VR that can break immersion at the worst moments, and a vocal minority in the community considers the base price steep relative to the content depth. The game also does not push the simulation very far on the strategic layer: there is no complex economy modeling, no faction diplomacy tree, no late-game scaling challenge that a numbers-first player would call deep. What it does instead is nail the kinetic feel of physical VR crafting inside a tightly wound risk-reward loop. The workshop customization, where you can freely reposition furniture to suit your production flow, adds a light base-building dimension that rewards planning without demanding spreadsheets. For strategy and sim players specifically, Crime Shop Simulator sits closer to the Visceral Sim end of the spectrum than the Grand Strategy end. The decisions are spatial and real-time rather than systemic and turn-based. If your comfort zone is Paradox titles or tycoon builders, treat this as a palate cleanser rather than a main course. For VR-curious players who want something with more tension than a cooking sim but less commitment than a full campaign, this is a well-constructed afternoon (or several) with a genuinely funny world wrapped around a crafting loop that holds up past the first hour. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayercooponline-coopcross-platformtier:sub-5Physics CraftingVR Co-opContraband ManagementDay-Night CycleFaction ReputationWorkshop CustomizationStealth PressureCross-Platform Co-op

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck UnsupportedProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 4 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA 1050GTX, Radeon Ryzen 7 7735H
Processor
Intel i7-7700K, AMD Ryzen 3 5300U
VR Support
OpenXR, Meta Quest 2, 3 & 3S, PSVR2, Rift

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Game Info

Developer
TREBUCHET
Publisher
TREBUCHET
Release Date
Jul 10, 2025

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What platforms is Crime Shop Simulator: A Prison Boss Game available on?

Crime Shop Simulator: A Prison Boss Game is available on PC.

When was Crime Shop Simulator: A Prison Boss Game released?

Crime Shop Simulator: A Prison Boss Game was released on 10 July 2025.

Who developed Crime Shop Simulator: A Prison Boss Game?

Crime Shop Simulator: A Prison Boss Game was developed by TREBUCHET.