Compare Hotel Galactic prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Ancient Forge. Published by Ancient Forge. Released on 7/24/2025. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Indie, Simulation, Early Access.

Gorgeous bones, a rocky launch, and a research tree that hints at something genuinely deep: Hotel Galactic is worth watching, but read the fine print before buying in now.

My first instinct with Hotel Galactic was to map out its systems the way I do with any management sim: resource chain on the left, worker priority matrix on the right. What I found underneath the painterly 2.5D exterior is a more layered loop than the cozy-game marketing suggests. You play as an incorporeal pilgrim spirit who inherits stewardship of a dilapidated intergalactic hotel on the floating island of Imoshima. Your job is to rebuild it from a three-worker ruin into a fully operational cosmic retreat, serving alien guests with distinct preferences across a restaurant, decorated guest rooms, and eventually underground facilities excavated by expedition teams. The core loop chains together resource gathering, crafting, room construction, and worker task management in a way that feels closer to a light colony sim than a pure decorator experience. Workers chop timber, mine stone, and haul materials to craft stations; you set task priorities and nudge urgency levels per job rather than pointing each worker individually. As you progress down the research tree, automation spirits take over repetitive duties like room cleaning and crop watering, which is exactly the kind of late-game relief that separates well-designed management sims from ones that turn into frantic clicking marathons. The cooking system lets you combine ingredients across different processors to discover new menu items, and a separate gardening zone feeds fresh produce into the kitchen supply chain. On paper, that is a respectable number of interlocking systems for an Early Access title in its first act. Here is the honest part. The launch window was rough. Steam user reviews sat at mixed territory at launch, and multiple critics flagged showstopper bugs in story mode, including crafting queue locks, food prep icons that freeze until you reload, and guest AI pathfinding that breaks under load. Ancient Forge patched aggressively in the first 24 hours and has since announced a substantial rework that overhauled NPC behavior, game logic, the UI, and Act 1 content, while adding a Hotel Compendium and a formal rating system. That cadence of developer response matters more than any single bug count. The sandbox mode runs meaningfully more stable than story mode and is worth using as a learning environment before committing your main save to the narrative. For players who care about decision depth, the tutorial is the weakest link. Early quests leave you guessing which crafting table produces which item, and the alerts menu fills up faster than the game explains how to clear it. Veteran management-sim players will muscle through by instinct; genre newcomers may need the community Discord or a fan-made journal walkthrough to get past the first hour. That friction is solvable with better onboarding, and it is clearly on the roadmap, but it is a real cost right now. The full story is also locked to Act 1 in the current build, with Acts 2 and 3 planned alongside additional alien species, VIP guest events, creature farming, and expanded underground rooms. The developers estimate one to two years in Early Access total, so buying now means signing up as a long-term participant. The visual and audio presentation is genuinely the strongest argument for jumping in early. The hand-drawn aesthetic draws clear inspiration from Ghibli-era animation, with warm watercolor textures, expressive alien character designs, and environmental details like swaying foliage and flickering lanterns that make the hotel feel inhabited rather than staged. Every major NPC is fully voiced with distinct personality, and the soundtrack sets mood without demanding your attention, which is exactly right for a game you will run in long sessions. If you can tolerate an unfinished story and the occasional save reload, the atmosphere alone sustains longer play than you might expect. Diego, Scout Team

Hotel Galactic
CasualIndieSimulationEarly Access

Hotel Galactic

Jul 24, 2025Ancient Forge
GamerScout Says

Gorgeous bones, a rocky launch, and a research tree that hints at something genuinely deep: Hotel Galactic is worth watching, but read the fine print before buying in now.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Hotel Galactic

My first instinct with Hotel Galactic was to map out its systems the way I do with any management sim: resource chain on the left, worker priority matrix on the right. What I found underneath the painterly 2.5D exterior is a more layered loop than the cozy-game marketing suggests. You play as an incorporeal pilgrim spirit who inherits stewardship of a dilapidated intergalactic hotel on the floating island of Imoshima. Your job is to rebuild it from a three-worker ruin into a fully operational cosmic retreat, serving alien guests with distinct preferences across a restaurant, decorated guest rooms, and eventually underground facilities excavated by expedition teams. The core loop chains together resource gathering, crafting, room construction, and worker task management in a way that feels closer to a light colony sim than a pure decorator experience. Workers chop timber, mine stone, and haul materials to craft stations; you set task priorities and nudge urgency levels per job rather than pointing each worker individually. As you progress down the research tree, automation spirits take over repetitive duties like room cleaning and crop watering, which is exactly the kind of late-game relief that separates well-designed management sims from ones that turn into frantic clicking marathons. The cooking system lets you combine ingredients across different processors to discover new menu items, and a separate gardening zone feeds fresh produce into the kitchen supply chain. On paper, that is a respectable number of interlocking systems for an Early Access title in its first act. Here is the honest part. The launch window was rough. Steam user reviews sat at mixed territory at launch, and multiple critics flagged showstopper bugs in story mode, including crafting queue locks, food prep icons that freeze until you reload, and guest AI pathfinding that breaks under load. Ancient Forge patched aggressively in the first 24 hours and has since announced a substantial rework that overhauled NPC behavior, game logic, the UI, and Act 1 content, while adding a Hotel Compendium and a formal rating system. That cadence of developer response matters more than any single bug count. The sandbox mode runs meaningfully more stable than story mode and is worth using as a learning environment before committing your main save to the narrative. For players who care about decision depth, the tutorial is the weakest link. Early quests leave you guessing which crafting table produces which item, and the alerts menu fills up faster than the game explains how to clear it. Veteran management-sim players will muscle through by instinct; genre newcomers may need the community Discord or a fan-made journal walkthrough to get past the first hour. That friction is solvable with better onboarding, and it is clearly on the roadmap, but it is a real cost right now. The full story is also locked to Act 1 in the current build, with Acts 2 and 3 planned alongside additional alien species, VIP guest events, creature farming, and expanded underground rooms. The developers estimate one to two years in Early Access total, so buying now means signing up as a long-term participant. The visual and audio presentation is genuinely the strongest argument for jumping in early. The hand-drawn aesthetic draws clear inspiration from Ghibli-era animation, with warm watercolor textures, expressive alien character designs, and environmental details like swaying foliage and flickering lanterns that make the hotel feel inhabited rather than staged. Every major NPC is fully voiced with distinct personality, and the soundtrack sets mood without demanding your attention, which is exactly right for a game you will run in long sessions. If you can tolerate an unfinished story and the occasional save reload, the atmosphere alone sustains longer play than you might expect. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:aaaColony-Sim ElementsWorker Priority SystemResearch TreeSide-View ManagementStory ModeSandbox ModeUnderground ExpeditionsAutomation UnlockAlien Guest AICooking Crafting

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Unsupported

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported.

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 750 Ti / AMD Radeon RX 550 / Intel Iris Xe
Processor
Intel Core i5-4460 / AMD FX-8350

Recommended

OS
Windows 10/11 64-bit
Memory
16 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
8 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060 (6GB) / GTX 1650 Super / AMD Radeon RX 580 (8GB)
Processor
Intel Core i5-8400 / AMD Ryzen 5 2600

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Game Info

Developer
Ancient Forge
Publisher
Ancient Forge
Release Date
Jul 24, 2025

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What platforms is Hotel Galactic available on?

Hotel Galactic is available on PC.

When was Hotel Galactic released?

Hotel Galactic was released on 24 July 2025.

Who developed Hotel Galactic?

Hotel Galactic was developed by Ancient Forge.