Compare Halcyon Days at Taoyuan prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by BotanX. Published by 方块游戏(CubeGame). Released on 1/19/2026. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Indie, RPG, Simulation.

More systems than you'd expect from a cozy pixel-art farm sim, built on an Ancient China setting that actually earns its distinctiveness rather than just wearing it as a costume.

I'll be straight with you: my instinct when I see 'farming sim' is to mentally sort it into a checklist - crops, fishing, gifting, sleep, repeat. Halcyon Days at Taoyuan passed that checklist in the first two hours and kept adding rows. What BotanX has built is a life sim with a surprisingly wide spread of interlocking systems, set against an Ancient China backdrop that informs everything from its festival calendar to the texture of its NPC writing. The comparison to Stardew Valley gets thrown around constantly, but the community's own pushback on that framing is telling: the pacing is slower, the systems are more involved, and the design philosophy leans toward breadth over the tight, optimisation-friendly loop that made Stardew so replayable. On the mechanical side, there are nine occupations you can develop - farming, forestry, animal husbandry, fishing, tailoring, cooking, construction, mining, and martial arts - each with its own progression and skill-up rewards. That last one is not decorative. Martial arts feeds into actual cave combat, where you can also tame creatures like pigs, monkeys, and cats to serve as companions with stat bonuses. The economy skips conventional currency in favour of a voucher system tied to village donations, which creates a slightly different resource calculus than the usual 'sell crops, buy upgrades' loop. Recipe and blueprint unlocks are gated behind light puzzles rather than simple purchases. These choices add up to something that feels considered rather than cloned. Adjustable day length and optional mini-game toggles (farming, fishing, and others can be turned on or off) mean you can tune the difficulty and pace without modding anything. The early-game is where the friction lives. Several players reported feeling genuinely lost for the first few in-game days, and the 'Rumors' quest system - which gates time-limited tasks behind a specific NPC you might not find immediately - was poorly paced at launch. The developer responded quickly and patched the rumor pacing within days of release, which is a good sign for long-term support. Quest design still has a rough edge: receiving a timed event asking you to craft copper armor or deliver a seasonal fruit that is literally out of season is the kind of thing that makes you tab out to a wiki. A community wiki and active Discord exist, which softens this, but it should not be required reading in week one. Some mini-games, particularly fishing, have drawn consistent criticism for imprecision, though they are skippable if they frustrate more than they engage. The roadmap is worth factoring into your decision. Online multiplayer is planned but currently non-functional outside China. Additional content including winter areas, new festivals, and mod support are committed on the developer's public roadmap. Post-launch updates have already added 84 Rumor quests, furniture rotation, and ore rate rebalancing. The community wiki is actively growing, and the developer's communication cadence has been responsive. For a solo-dev-scale indie, that trajectory matters more than the day-one bug count. Who is this actually for? Players who want a farming sim with more mechanical surface area than Stardew Valley but without the systems-depth of something like Farming Simulator or CRPG-tier stat management. The NPC writing is strong enough that relationship and romance routes feel genuinely characterful rather than transactional. If you have bounced off the genre before because it felt too shallow, Taoyuan is a reasonable re-entry point. If you need tight onboarding and zero wiki-consulting, give it another patch cycle or two. Diego, Scout Team

Halcyon Days at Taoyuan
CasualIndieRPGSimulation

Halcyon Days at Taoyuan

Jan 19, 2026BotanX方块游戏(CubeGame)
GamerScout Says

More systems than you'd expect from a cozy pixel-art farm sim, built on an Ancient China setting that actually earns its distinctiveness rather than just wearing it as a costume.

PC
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About Halcyon Days at Taoyuan

I'll be straight with you: my instinct when I see 'farming sim' is to mentally sort it into a checklist - crops, fishing, gifting, sleep, repeat. Halcyon Days at Taoyuan passed that checklist in the first two hours and kept adding rows. What BotanX has built is a life sim with a surprisingly wide spread of interlocking systems, set against an Ancient China backdrop that informs everything from its festival calendar to the texture of its NPC writing. The comparison to Stardew Valley gets thrown around constantly, but the community's own pushback on that framing is telling: the pacing is slower, the systems are more involved, and the design philosophy leans toward breadth over the tight, optimisation-friendly loop that made Stardew so replayable. On the mechanical side, there are nine occupations you can develop - farming, forestry, animal husbandry, fishing, tailoring, cooking, construction, mining, and martial arts - each with its own progression and skill-up rewards. That last one is not decorative. Martial arts feeds into actual cave combat, where you can also tame creatures like pigs, monkeys, and cats to serve as companions with stat bonuses. The economy skips conventional currency in favour of a voucher system tied to village donations, which creates a slightly different resource calculus than the usual 'sell crops, buy upgrades' loop. Recipe and blueprint unlocks are gated behind light puzzles rather than simple purchases. These choices add up to something that feels considered rather than cloned. Adjustable day length and optional mini-game toggles (farming, fishing, and others can be turned on or off) mean you can tune the difficulty and pace without modding anything. The early-game is where the friction lives. Several players reported feeling genuinely lost for the first few in-game days, and the 'Rumors' quest system - which gates time-limited tasks behind a specific NPC you might not find immediately - was poorly paced at launch. The developer responded quickly and patched the rumor pacing within days of release, which is a good sign for long-term support. Quest design still has a rough edge: receiving a timed event asking you to craft copper armor or deliver a seasonal fruit that is literally out of season is the kind of thing that makes you tab out to a wiki. A community wiki and active Discord exist, which softens this, but it should not be required reading in week one. Some mini-games, particularly fishing, have drawn consistent criticism for imprecision, though they are skippable if they frustrate more than they engage. The roadmap is worth factoring into your decision. Online multiplayer is planned but currently non-functional outside China. Additional content including winter areas, new festivals, and mod support are committed on the developer's public roadmap. Post-launch updates have already added 84 Rumor quests, furniture rotation, and ore rate rebalancing. The community wiki is actively growing, and the developer's communication cadence has been responsive. For a solo-dev-scale indie, that trajectory matters more than the day-one bug count. Who is this actually for? Players who want a farming sim with more mechanical surface area than Stardew Valley but without the systems-depth of something like Farming Simulator or CRPG-tier stat management. The NPC writing is strong enough that relationship and romance routes feel genuinely characterful rather than transactional. If you have bounced off the genre before because it felt too shallow, Taoyuan is a reasonable re-entry point. If you need tight onboarding and zero wiki-consulting, give it another patch cycle or two. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:indieAncient China SettingOccupation SystemCreature TamingVoucher EconomyMartial Arts CombatSeasonal FestivalsRomance RoutesMini-game TogglesRoadmap Active

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 3 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows Vista or greater
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 10
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
256 mb video memory, shader model 3.0+
Processor
2 Ghz

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Game Info

Developer
BotanX
Publisher
方块游戏(CubeGame)
Release Date
Jan 19, 2026

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Halcyon Days at Taoyuan is available on PC.

When was Halcyon Days at Taoyuan released?

Halcyon Days at Taoyuan was released on 19 January 2026.

Who developed Halcyon Days at Taoyuan?

Halcyon Days at Taoyuan was developed by BotanX and published by 方块游戏(CubeGame).