Compare Mars Base prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Khuong Le. Published by indie.io. Released on 10/17/2022. Available on PC, Mac. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Simulation.

Stardew Valley relocated to the Red Planet sounds like a winning premise. The execution lands somewhere between charming solo passion project and cautionary tale about depth versus breadth.

My spreadsheet brain lit up when I saw the pitch: a top-down farming RPG set on Mars, where soil toxicity, crop micronutrients, and autonomous robots replace the usual pastoral hand-holding. The Stardew Valley and Harvest Moon DNA is deliberate and acknowledged by the developer, but the Martian coat of paint genuinely reframes the familiar loop. Instead of watering tomatoes for a kindly grandpa, you are managing colonist nutrition, converting hostile regolith, and keeping a fledgling outpost alive with no resupply from Earth. That tension, at least in premise, is more interesting than it sounds on a Tuesday afternoon. The systems on paper are broad. You get modular planters that can be configured in multiple layouts, autonomous robots to handle watering and harvesting once you set them up, crafting facilities, research labs, solar power plants, and underground cavern exploration for raw resources. The colony grows over time as new arrivals join every couple of in-game years, adding colonists with their own specialisations and side quests. There is even combat in the caves, mini-games scattered across the base, fishing, and a cooking system to round out the micronutrient demands of your crew. For a one-person part-time project, that is an ambitious feature list, and credit is due for the ambition. Here is where the strategy side of my brain starts filing complaints, though. The Steam community has landed at a dead-even split on the experience, and the recurring pattern in player feedback points to shallow execution under all that surface area. NPC conversations get repetitive fast, the quest pool runs thin before you hit the mid-game, and the UI controls carry the friction of a PC-first design that was not fully rethought for alternative inputs. The day-stamina system punishes overwork with a gold penalty if you pass out, which is a fine pressure mechanic, but the lack of meaningful late-game depth means that pressure never builds into anything particularly satisfying to optimise. A session runs around ten hours before the content ceiling becomes visible, which is low for a game wearing farming-sim ambitions. For newcomers to the genre this is actually a lighter ask than something like Stardew at its most completionist, and the Mars setting gives even genre veterans a fresh enough backdrop to justify a short run. The pixel art is cheerful, the tone is breezy, and the core farming-and-exploration loop holds together for the first several hours. Solo co-op via a local second player controlling a helper robot is a neat bonus for occasional couch sessions. What is missing is the decision-making density that keeps players logging back in after week one. There are no branching crop strategies, no economy to min-max, no mod ecosystem to plug the content gap, and no signal that post-launch updates have substantially expanded the quest depth. As a debut from a solo developer working evenings, Mars Base is a respectable proof of concept. As a farming sim you will sink a season into, it falls short of that bar. Diego, Scout Team

Mars Base
AdventureCasualSimulation

Mars Base

Oct 17, 2022Khuong Leindie.io
GamerScout Says

Stardew Valley relocated to the Red Planet sounds like a winning premise. The execution lands somewhere between charming solo passion project and cautionary tale about depth versus breadth.

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About Mars Base

My spreadsheet brain lit up when I saw the pitch: a top-down farming RPG set on Mars, where soil toxicity, crop micronutrients, and autonomous robots replace the usual pastoral hand-holding. The Stardew Valley and Harvest Moon DNA is deliberate and acknowledged by the developer, but the Martian coat of paint genuinely reframes the familiar loop. Instead of watering tomatoes for a kindly grandpa, you are managing colonist nutrition, converting hostile regolith, and keeping a fledgling outpost alive with no resupply from Earth. That tension, at least in premise, is more interesting than it sounds on a Tuesday afternoon. The systems on paper are broad. You get modular planters that can be configured in multiple layouts, autonomous robots to handle watering and harvesting once you set them up, crafting facilities, research labs, solar power plants, and underground cavern exploration for raw resources. The colony grows over time as new arrivals join every couple of in-game years, adding colonists with their own specialisations and side quests. There is even combat in the caves, mini-games scattered across the base, fishing, and a cooking system to round out the micronutrient demands of your crew. For a one-person part-time project, that is an ambitious feature list, and credit is due for the ambition. Here is where the strategy side of my brain starts filing complaints, though. The Steam community has landed at a dead-even split on the experience, and the recurring pattern in player feedback points to shallow execution under all that surface area. NPC conversations get repetitive fast, the quest pool runs thin before you hit the mid-game, and the UI controls carry the friction of a PC-first design that was not fully rethought for alternative inputs. The day-stamina system punishes overwork with a gold penalty if you pass out, which is a fine pressure mechanic, but the lack of meaningful late-game depth means that pressure never builds into anything particularly satisfying to optimise. A session runs around ten hours before the content ceiling becomes visible, which is low for a game wearing farming-sim ambitions. For newcomers to the genre this is actually a lighter ask than something like Stardew at its most completionist, and the Mars setting gives even genre veterans a fresh enough backdrop to justify a short run. The pixel art is cheerful, the tone is breezy, and the core farming-and-exploration loop holds together for the first several hours. Solo co-op via a local second player controlling a helper robot is a neat bonus for occasional couch sessions. What is missing is the decision-making density that keeps players logging back in after week one. There are no branching crop strategies, no economy to min-max, no mod ecosystem to plug the content gap, and no signal that post-launch updates have substantially expanded the quest depth. As a debut from a solo developer working evenings, Mars Base is a respectable proof of concept. As a farming sim you will sink a season into, it falls short of that bar. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscloud-savestier:sub-5Colonist ManagementStamina SystemSoil ConversionRobot AutomationCave ExplorationLocal Co-opCooking SystemCrop NutrientsTop-Down RPG

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Playable

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Microsoft 64-bit Windows 7
Memory
1 GB RAM
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
256mb Video Memory, capable of OpenGL 2.0+ support
Processor
2.0 Ghz

Recommended

OS
Microsoft 64-bit Windows 7
Memory
1 GB RAM
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
256mb Video Memory, capable of OpenGL 2.0+ support
Processor
2.0 Ghz

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Game Info

Developer
Khuong Le
Publisher
indie.io
Release Date
Oct 17, 2022

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Price History

2026-06-102.60(lowest)
2026-06-092.60(lowest)

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What platforms is Mars Base available on?

Mars Base is available on PC, Mac.

When was Mars Base released?

Mars Base was released on 17 October 2022.

Who developed Mars Base?

Mars Base was developed by Khuong Le and published by indie.io.