Compare MOAI 5: New Generation Collector’s Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Toyman Interactive. Published by ESDigital Games. Released on 3/29/2018. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Simulation.

A gentle clock-pleaser for fans of the genre, MOAI 5 adds mouse-drawn elemental spells to its tried-and-true resource loop, but a mixed Steam reception hints at friction points worth knowing before you click buy.

My spreadsheet instincts fire up even in casual territory, and MOAI 5: New Generation is a game that rewards exactly that kind of attentive play. Each level drops you into a blocked-off map with a small worker crew and a resource deficit you need to think your way out of. You are collecting food from bread trees, chopping fallen timber for wood, quarrying stone, smelting ore, pressing coconut oil, and cycling through trading posts when your stockpiles go lopsided. The loop is tight, the feedback is immediate, and the gold-timer challenge means there is always a more optimal path to find if you care to replay. The headline addition in this fifth entry is the dual-protagonist structure. You alternate control between the twin siblings Hika-Ri and Kao-Ri, each handling a separate half of the map. The son's branch leans on crafting wearable items and drinkable potions, while the daughter's branch introduces the mouse-drawn spell system: trace the correct symbol on screen to suppress a hurricane, drought, or flood before it eats your work queue. In practice this mechanic is a compressed, physical burst inside an otherwise click-and-queue game, and it breaks up monotony reasonably well. The biome variety supports the structure, too: tropical shorelines, cave networks, fiery deserts, snowy mountains, and an underwater section each carry their own visual identity. Here is where the mixed Steam reception (roughly two-thirds positive across a small sample) starts to make sense. Ghost encounters on certain levels are persistent and punishing in a way that fights the relaxed pacing the rest of the game builds. Some stages also demand volumes of a single resource so large that progress stalls into pure waiting, particularly on the timed runs. A reported application crash bug that throws players out mid-level, especially on the tougher ghost stages, compounds the frustration. Casual mode removes the clock pressure but does not neutralize the ghost problem or the crash risk, which means the game occasionally works against its own audience. For genre veterans who have cleared the earlier MOAI titles, this is a reasonable continuation with a couple of genuine mechanical wrinkles worth experiencing, even if it is not the strongest entry in the series. For newcomers, the step-by-step tutorial, the easy mode, and the downloadable level walkthrough included in the Collector's Edition make it approachable enough that the learning curve is not the concern. The concern is whether the ghost-heavy levels will kill your goodwill before the better-designed stages get to shine. If you are already a time-management devotee who can tolerate the occasional rough edge, the dual-path design and the spell-drawing system give MOAI 5 enough identity to sit on the playlist. Diego, Scout Team

MOAI 5: New Generation Collector’s Edition
CasualSimulation

MOAI 5: New Generation Collector’s Edition

Mar 29, 2018Toyman InteractiveESDigital Games
GamerScout Says

A gentle clock-pleaser for fans of the genre, MOAI 5 adds mouse-drawn elemental spells to its tried-and-true resource loop, but a mixed Steam reception hints at friction points worth knowing before you click buy.

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About MOAI 5: New Generation Collector’s Edition

My spreadsheet instincts fire up even in casual territory, and MOAI 5: New Generation is a game that rewards exactly that kind of attentive play. Each level drops you into a blocked-off map with a small worker crew and a resource deficit you need to think your way out of. You are collecting food from bread trees, chopping fallen timber for wood, quarrying stone, smelting ore, pressing coconut oil, and cycling through trading posts when your stockpiles go lopsided. The loop is tight, the feedback is immediate, and the gold-timer challenge means there is always a more optimal path to find if you care to replay. The headline addition in this fifth entry is the dual-protagonist structure. You alternate control between the twin siblings Hika-Ri and Kao-Ri, each handling a separate half of the map. The son's branch leans on crafting wearable items and drinkable potions, while the daughter's branch introduces the mouse-drawn spell system: trace the correct symbol on screen to suppress a hurricane, drought, or flood before it eats your work queue. In practice this mechanic is a compressed, physical burst inside an otherwise click-and-queue game, and it breaks up monotony reasonably well. The biome variety supports the structure, too: tropical shorelines, cave networks, fiery deserts, snowy mountains, and an underwater section each carry their own visual identity. Here is where the mixed Steam reception (roughly two-thirds positive across a small sample) starts to make sense. Ghost encounters on certain levels are persistent and punishing in a way that fights the relaxed pacing the rest of the game builds. Some stages also demand volumes of a single resource so large that progress stalls into pure waiting, particularly on the timed runs. A reported application crash bug that throws players out mid-level, especially on the tougher ghost stages, compounds the frustration. Casual mode removes the clock pressure but does not neutralize the ghost problem or the crash risk, which means the game occasionally works against its own audience. For genre veterans who have cleared the earlier MOAI titles, this is a reasonable continuation with a couple of genuine mechanical wrinkles worth experiencing, even if it is not the strongest entry in the series. For newcomers, the step-by-step tutorial, the easy mode, and the downloadable level walkthrough included in the Collector's Edition make it approachable enough that the learning curve is not the concern. The concern is whether the ghost-heavy levels will kill your goodwill before the better-designed stages get to shine. If you are already a time-management devotee who can tolerate the occasional rough edge, the dual-path design and the spell-drawing system give MOAI 5 enough identity to sit on the playlist. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:sub-5Time ManagementResource ChainMouse-Drawn SpellsDual ProtagonistLevel ReplayCasual StrategyTimed Levels

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP / Vista / 7 / 8 / 8.1 / 10
Memory
1500 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
512 MB available space
Graphics
256 MB VRAM
Processor
1,4 GHz

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Game Info

Developer
Toyman Interactive
Publisher
ESDigital Games
Release Date
Mar 29, 2018

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2026-06-101.03(lowest)

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What platforms is MOAI 5: New Generation Collector’s Edition available on?

MOAI 5: New Generation Collector’s Edition is available on PC.

When was MOAI 5: New Generation Collector’s Edition released?

MOAI 5: New Generation Collector’s Edition was released on 29 March 2018.

Who developed MOAI 5: New Generation Collector’s Edition?

MOAI 5: New Generation Collector’s Edition was developed by Toyman Interactive and published by ESDigital Games.