Compare Disco Simulator prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Games Incubator. Published by Games Incubator. Released on 3/5/2024. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Indie, Simulation, Strategy.

A nightclub tycoon that gets the foundational loop right but forgets to build on top of it. Worth a look at sub-5 pricing, not much beyond that.

My spreadsheet instincts kicked in the moment I hit the manager select screen: pick a specialist for bartender bonuses, customer satisfaction, or concert organisation, and that choice quietly shapes every income stream you open later. That early promise of meaningful decisions is the best thing Disco Simulator has going for it, and I want to be honest that it does not sustain itself for long. The core gameplay divides each in-game cycle cleanly into a daytime prep phase and a nighttime operations phase. By day you lay out dancefloors and bars, upgrade lighting and sound equipment, hire cleaners and door staff, and plan which celebrity DJ or band to book for the evening's concert slot. By night you react: manually assign staff to incidents, keep the bar stocked, ID-check guests at the door, and mix drinks in simple mini-games that break the rhythm rather than deepen it. That day-night split gives the whole thing a readable structure that genuinely works for newcomers to the tycoon genre. If you have never touched a Two Point game or a management sim, there is enough scaffold here to feel like progress. The issues are structural. First, the tutorial is buried in the pause menu as static text pages, which is a significant problem for any game that expects you to juggle a live club on night one. The UI itself is functional but unintuitive, with critical options hidden behind menus that require more clicks than they should. Second, the campaign's scenario design follows a strict formula: hit a cash target or reach a set Disco Level by placing decorations, hosting events, and unlocking upgrades, then reset to a fresh venue and start again. Each venue wipe means re-hiring cleaners and re-purchasing basic amenities from scratch, which strips out any sense of compounding mastery. Third, and most damaging for a game with this theme, the music selection is a thin loop of stock dance tracks. You cannot import your own tracks, you cannot pick genres to attract different crowd demographics, and hiring a DJ is a footfall multiplier rather than a creative choice. For a game literally named after a musical movement, that feels like an enormous missed opportunity. The isometric presentation is colourful and functional. Neon lighting does its job, the cartoon crowd animates predictably, and performance is clean on mid-range PC hardware. Staff AI is shallow though: workers stand largely rooted unless manually directed, and the crisis resolution system forces you to hand-assign someone to every spilled drink and overflowing toilet rather than building smarter management layers over time. Steam user sentiment sits around 72 percent positive, which maps accurately to the experience: it is fine, not frustrating, rarely exciting. For the strategy and sim crowd who live in games like Planet Coaster or Two Point Campus, Disco Simulator will feel undercooked within a couple of hours. The decision tree is shallow, there are no economic curveballs or escalating difficulty, and the repetitive scenario structure means you are not building toward anything that feels cumulative. For casual players who want a relaxed tycoon session in a fun theme, it delivers adequately within its limits. The manager selection at the start is the deepest systems choice the game ever asks of you, which tells you most of what you need to know. Diego, Scout Team

Disco Simulator
CasualIndieSimulationStrategy

Disco Simulator

Mar 5, 2024Games Incubator
GamerScout Says

A nightclub tycoon that gets the foundational loop right but forgets to build on top of it. Worth a look at sub-5 pricing, not much beyond that.

PC
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About Disco Simulator

My spreadsheet instincts kicked in the moment I hit the manager select screen: pick a specialist for bartender bonuses, customer satisfaction, or concert organisation, and that choice quietly shapes every income stream you open later. That early promise of meaningful decisions is the best thing Disco Simulator has going for it, and I want to be honest that it does not sustain itself for long. The core gameplay divides each in-game cycle cleanly into a daytime prep phase and a nighttime operations phase. By day you lay out dancefloors and bars, upgrade lighting and sound equipment, hire cleaners and door staff, and plan which celebrity DJ or band to book for the evening's concert slot. By night you react: manually assign staff to incidents, keep the bar stocked, ID-check guests at the door, and mix drinks in simple mini-games that break the rhythm rather than deepen it. That day-night split gives the whole thing a readable structure that genuinely works for newcomers to the tycoon genre. If you have never touched a Two Point game or a management sim, there is enough scaffold here to feel like progress. The issues are structural. First, the tutorial is buried in the pause menu as static text pages, which is a significant problem for any game that expects you to juggle a live club on night one. The UI itself is functional but unintuitive, with critical options hidden behind menus that require more clicks than they should. Second, the campaign's scenario design follows a strict formula: hit a cash target or reach a set Disco Level by placing decorations, hosting events, and unlocking upgrades, then reset to a fresh venue and start again. Each venue wipe means re-hiring cleaners and re-purchasing basic amenities from scratch, which strips out any sense of compounding mastery. Third, and most damaging for a game with this theme, the music selection is a thin loop of stock dance tracks. You cannot import your own tracks, you cannot pick genres to attract different crowd demographics, and hiring a DJ is a footfall multiplier rather than a creative choice. For a game literally named after a musical movement, that feels like an enormous missed opportunity. The isometric presentation is colourful and functional. Neon lighting does its job, the cartoon crowd animates predictably, and performance is clean on mid-range PC hardware. Staff AI is shallow though: workers stand largely rooted unless manually directed, and the crisis resolution system forces you to hand-assign someone to every spilled drink and overflowing toilet rather than building smarter management layers over time. Steam user sentiment sits around 72 percent positive, which maps accurately to the experience: it is fine, not frustrating, rarely exciting. For the strategy and sim crowd who live in games like Planet Coaster or Two Point Campus, Disco Simulator will feel undercooked within a couple of hours. The decision tree is shallow, there are no economic curveballs or escalating difficulty, and the repetitive scenario structure means you are not building toward anything that feels cumulative. For casual players who want a relaxed tycoon session in a fun theme, it delivers adequately within its limits. The manager selection at the start is the deepest systems choice the game ever asks of you, which tells you most of what you need to know. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:sub-5Nightclub TycoonDay-Night CycleManager SpecialisationScenario ResetMini-GamesIsometric ManagementEvent BookingCasual Tycoon

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Playable

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 64 Bit / Windows 8 64 Bit / Windows 10 64 Bit
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
10 GB available space
Graphics
NVidia GeForce GTX 970
Processor
Intel Core i3 3.0 GHz

Recommended

OS
Windows 7 64 Bit / Windows 8 64 Bit / Windows 10 64 Bit
Memory
12 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
12 GB available space
Graphics
NVidia GeForce GTX 980
Processor
Intel Core i5 3.4 GHz

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Game Info

Developer
Games Incubator
Publisher
Games Incubator
Release Date
Mar 5, 2024

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What platforms is Disco Simulator available on?

Disco Simulator is available on PC.

When was Disco Simulator released?

Disco Simulator was released on 5 March 2024.

Who developed Disco Simulator?

Disco Simulator was developed by Games Incubator.