Compare Hero's Hour prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Benjamin "ThingOnItsOwn" Hauer. Published by Maple Whispering Limited, Goblinz Publishing. Released on 3/1/2022. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: RPG, Strategy. Metacritic score: 82/100.

A solo-dev Heroes of Might and Magic riff with real-time auto-battles, procedural maps, and deep hero progression. Rough around the edges but genuinely compulsive.

Hero's Hour is a turn-based strategy RPG built almost entirely by one developer, and that context matters when you sit down with it. The skeleton is immediately familiar if you've spent any time with the Heroes of Might and Magic series: you move heroes across an overworld map, capture resource nodes and towns, recruit unit stacks, and race to stomp your enemies before they stomp you. The twist is that battles resolve in real-time, with your armies clashing automatically while you watch - and occasionally intervene with hero spells and abilities. It sounds like it should feel passive, but managing your hero build, spell loadout, and army composition to survive increasingly nasty encounters is a genuine puzzle that gets meatier as campaigns progress. Hero progression is the strongest hook here. Heroes level up through exploration and combat, picking up skills and spells along branching upgrade trees. The variety is real: you can lean into summoning, pure combat buffs, mobility tricks, or hybrid spell-slingers, and different faction units interact with those choices in satisfying ways. The procedurally generated maps mean no two runs feel identical, and the faction roster is wide enough that replaying with a different starting choice reshuffles your strategic options meaningfully. For a solo-dev project this is quietly impressive build variety, and it holds up well past the first dozen hours. Where the game strains is in polish and pacing. The real-time battles, while visually charming in a pixelated chaotic-swarm way, can occasionally feel like a blender where readability suffers. When twenty unit types are scrapping simultaneously, it is not always clear why you lost or what ability triggered what. The UI is functional but spartan, and new players will hit a learning wall that the in-game guidance does not fully cushion. There are also maps and difficulty spikes that feel less like intentional design and more like procedural generation landing awkwardly. If you come expecting the refined campaign scripting of a big-budget strategy RPG, you will be disappointed. The writing and worldbuilding serve as flavor rather than substance - this is not a game you play for narrative payoff or character arcs. What it does well is deliver a compulsive loop that respects your time better than most genre entries. Matches run shorter than a classic HoMM session, the auto-battle system strips out the micro you might not have wanted anyway, and the difficulty settings are honest about what they do. The 80 percent positive Steam rating with over five thousand reviews from a mixed label suggests a player base that found real value but wanted more - which tracks. This is a game that punches above its budget and occasionally above its weight class, but not one that has fully smoothed out its rough patches. If you are a strategy RPG fan who fondly remembers queuing up HoMM 3 armies at 2am and can forgive interface limitations in exchange for genuine mechanical depth, Hero's Hour scratches an itch that very few modern games bother to address. If you need strong storytelling, polished UI, or a hand-held early game, look elsewhere. The solo-dev origins are both its charm and its ceiling. Monika, Scout Team

Hero's Hour
RPGStrategy

Hero's Hour

Mar 1, 2022Benjamin "ThingOnItsOwn" HauerMaple Whispering Limited, Goblinz Publishing
GamerScout Says

A solo-dev Heroes of Might and Magic riff with real-time auto-battles, procedural maps, and deep hero progression. Rough around the edges but genuinely compulsive.

PCXbox
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Hero's Hour

Hero's Hour is a turn-based strategy RPG built almost entirely by one developer, and that context matters when you sit down with it. The skeleton is immediately familiar if you've spent any time with the Heroes of Might and Magic series: you move heroes across an overworld map, capture resource nodes and towns, recruit unit stacks, and race to stomp your enemies before they stomp you. The twist is that battles resolve in real-time, with your armies clashing automatically while you watch - and occasionally intervene with hero spells and abilities. It sounds like it should feel passive, but managing your hero build, spell loadout, and army composition to survive increasingly nasty encounters is a genuine puzzle that gets meatier as campaigns progress. Hero progression is the strongest hook here. Heroes level up through exploration and combat, picking up skills and spells along branching upgrade trees. The variety is real: you can lean into summoning, pure combat buffs, mobility tricks, or hybrid spell-slingers, and different faction units interact with those choices in satisfying ways. The procedurally generated maps mean no two runs feel identical, and the faction roster is wide enough that replaying with a different starting choice reshuffles your strategic options meaningfully. For a solo-dev project this is quietly impressive build variety, and it holds up well past the first dozen hours. Where the game strains is in polish and pacing. The real-time battles, while visually charming in a pixelated chaotic-swarm way, can occasionally feel like a blender where readability suffers. When twenty unit types are scrapping simultaneously, it is not always clear why you lost or what ability triggered what. The UI is functional but spartan, and new players will hit a learning wall that the in-game guidance does not fully cushion. There are also maps and difficulty spikes that feel less like intentional design and more like procedural generation landing awkwardly. If you come expecting the refined campaign scripting of a big-budget strategy RPG, you will be disappointed. The writing and worldbuilding serve as flavor rather than substance - this is not a game you play for narrative payoff or character arcs. What it does well is deliver a compulsive loop that respects your time better than most genre entries. Matches run shorter than a classic HoMM session, the auto-battle system strips out the micro you might not have wanted anyway, and the difficulty settings are honest about what they do. The 80 percent positive Steam rating with over five thousand reviews from a mixed label suggests a player base that found real value but wanted more - which tracks. This is a game that punches above its budget and occasionally above its weight class, but not one that has fully smoothed out its rough patches. If you are a strategy RPG fan who fondly remembers queuing up HoMM 3 armies at 2am and can forgive interface limitations in exchange for genuine mechanical depth, Hero's Hour scratches an itch that very few modern games bother to address. If you need strong storytelling, polished UI, or a hand-held early game, look elsewhere. The solo-dev origins are both its charm and its ceiling. Monika, Scout Team

Tags

steamHeroes of Might and Magic-likeAuto-battleHero ProgressionFaction VarietyProcedural MapsSolo DeveloperOverworld ExplorationSpell Builds

System Requirements

System requirements for Hero's Hour aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

DLC & Add-ons for Hero's Hour1

Expansions, DLC packs and add-on content for this game. Click any item to see store offers.

Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
82
Steam
80%(5,673)

Game Info

Developer
Benjamin "ThingOnItsOwn" Hauer
Publisher
Maple Whispering Limited, Goblinz Publishing
Release Date
Mar 1, 2022

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

More from Benjamin "ThingOnItsOwn" Hauer