Compare Monster Prom 4: Monster Con prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Beautiful Glitch. Published by Beautiful Glitch. Released on 4/24/2025. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Casual, Indie, Simulation, Strategy.

Stat-juggling party chaos wrapped in absurdist monster romance: Monster Con is the series at its sharpest, and it wants up to four of you arguing over the same clown idol.

My instinct when a new entry in a long-running series hits 98% positive on Steam is to look for the asterisk. With Monster Con, I had trouble finding one. Beautiful Glitch has quietly built one of the tightest short-session strategy loops in the visual novel space, and this fourth installment refines every mechanical lever the series has pulled since the original Monster Prom. The core loop is deceptively numbers-driven for something that looks like a cartoon. Each day at the convention you pick a location, watch a scene with your target love interests, and answer prompts that trade stats against each other. That last part matters: Monster Con introduces a stat-loss mechanic where gains come paired with reductions, and locations lock out once visited per day. You cannot brute-force smarts all morning and expect to charm Omen by afternoon. Each run is two hours or so, decisions compound quickly, and the five stats (smarts, boldness, creativity, charm, fun) map tightly to which of the six romanceable characters you can realistically pursue. Zoe the eldritch author, Liam the hipster vampire, Nico the cosplayer mimic, Doug the sentimental slime, Omen the reformed evil overlord, and April First the clown idol all have distinct stat preferences, and reading the room correctly is genuinely satisfying when it clicks. The new comic-building mechanic is a smart addition. Throughout the con you pick prompts that Mad Lib together a comic book revealed at run's end, which adds a second creative thread to chase without bloating the session length. Food court meetings serve as structured date checkpoints where pepper ratings on your date options (zero peppers for platonic, three for something considerably less innocent) steer your ending variant without touching your stats. That separation of social tone from mechanical progress is a clean design call. The humor is aggressively crass, full of drug jokes, fourth-wall demolitions, and references dense enough that some players will bounce off the con-nerd-specific wave of memes. If that register works for you, the writing is genuinely funny and character voices are consistent across dozens of events. If it doesn't, no amount of mechanical appreciation will carry you through. The multiplayer structure is where the game earns its party-game identity. Up to four players compete or cooperate for the same love interests, and the PVP friction of two players chasing April First simultaneously creates the kind of shouting-at-the-screen moments that justify local co-op setups. Solo play is perfectly valid but slightly flatter; a reported bug causing occasional freezes in solo mode has been noted in early community feedback, worth keeping in mind. Post-launch, Beautiful Glitch has continued adding playable character DLC packs and guest date characters, so the content pool has grown meaningfully past launch. Secret endings require multiple runs and specific cross-run unlock conditions, giving genuine long-tail replay value to completionists who want to fill out that achievement list. For newcomers: the first Monster Prom is probably the cleaner introduction to the formula, and some reviewers feel Monster Con assumes familiarity with the series' sense of humor and character history. That said, the mechanical onboarding is fine and the stat system is forgiving enough for a first run. Treat the first playthrough as a tutorial for learning character preferences rather than a run to win, and the learning curve disappears fast. For returning players, this is the most mechanically complete version of the formula the series has produced. Diego, Scout Team

Monster Prom 4: Monster Con
CasualIndieSimulationStrategy

Monster Prom 4: Monster Con

Apr 24, 2025Beautiful Glitch
GamerScout Says

Stat-juggling party chaos wrapped in absurdist monster romance: Monster Con is the series at its sharpest, and it wants up to four of you arguing over the same clown idol.

PCMacLinux
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 Monster Prom 4: Monster Con

My instinct when a new entry in a long-running series hits 98% positive on Steam is to look for the asterisk. With Monster Con, I had trouble finding one. Beautiful Glitch has quietly built one of the tightest short-session strategy loops in the visual novel space, and this fourth installment refines every mechanical lever the series has pulled since the original Monster Prom. The core loop is deceptively numbers-driven for something that looks like a cartoon. Each day at the convention you pick a location, watch a scene with your target love interests, and answer prompts that trade stats against each other. That last part matters: Monster Con introduces a stat-loss mechanic where gains come paired with reductions, and locations lock out once visited per day. You cannot brute-force smarts all morning and expect to charm Omen by afternoon. Each run is two hours or so, decisions compound quickly, and the five stats (smarts, boldness, creativity, charm, fun) map tightly to which of the six romanceable characters you can realistically pursue. Zoe the eldritch author, Liam the hipster vampire, Nico the cosplayer mimic, Doug the sentimental slime, Omen the reformed evil overlord, and April First the clown idol all have distinct stat preferences, and reading the room correctly is genuinely satisfying when it clicks. The new comic-building mechanic is a smart addition. Throughout the con you pick prompts that Mad Lib together a comic book revealed at run's end, which adds a second creative thread to chase without bloating the session length. Food court meetings serve as structured date checkpoints where pepper ratings on your date options (zero peppers for platonic, three for something considerably less innocent) steer your ending variant without touching your stats. That separation of social tone from mechanical progress is a clean design call. The humor is aggressively crass, full of drug jokes, fourth-wall demolitions, and references dense enough that some players will bounce off the con-nerd-specific wave of memes. If that register works for you, the writing is genuinely funny and character voices are consistent across dozens of events. If it doesn't, no amount of mechanical appreciation will carry you through. The multiplayer structure is where the game earns its party-game identity. Up to four players compete or cooperate for the same love interests, and the PVP friction of two players chasing April First simultaneously creates the kind of shouting-at-the-screen moments that justify local co-op setups. Solo play is perfectly valid but slightly flatter; a reported bug causing occasional freezes in solo mode has been noted in early community feedback, worth keeping in mind. Post-launch, Beautiful Glitch has continued adding playable character DLC packs and guest date characters, so the content pool has grown meaningfully past launch. Secret endings require multiple runs and specific cross-run unlock conditions, giving genuine long-tail replay value to completionists who want to fill out that achievement list. For newcomers: the first Monster Prom is probably the cleaner introduction to the formula, and some reviewers feel Monster Con assumes familiarity with the series' sense of humor and character history. That said, the mechanical onboarding is fine and the stat system is forgiving enough for a first run. Treat the first playthrough as a tutorial for learning character preferences rather than a run to win, and the learning curve disappears fast. For returning players, this is the most mechanically complete version of the formula the series has produced. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvplocal-multiplayercooponline-cooplocal-coopachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Stat ManagementParty GameMultiple EndingsRoguelite RunsCrass HumorSecret EndingsConvention SettingCompetitive Co-op

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum

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

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 8 or higher
Memory
8 GB RAM
Storage
2 GB available space
Processor
Anything from the last 5 years

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Monster Prom 4: Monster Con.

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Beautiful Glitch
Publisher
Beautiful Glitch
Release Date
Apr 24, 2025

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

More from Beautiful Glitch

Buy smarter: helpful guides

Looking for more? See games like Monster Prom 4: Monster Con

Frequently asked questions about Monster Prom 4: Monster Con

How much does Monster Prom 4: Monster Con cost?

Monster Prom 4: Monster Con pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock key and store offers across 50+ verified shops, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

Where can I buy Monster Prom 4: Monster Con cheapest?

Compare Monster Prom 4: Monster Con prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Monster Prom 4: Monster Con available on?

Monster Prom 4: Monster Con is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was Monster Prom 4: Monster Con released?

Monster Prom 4: Monster Con was released on 24 April 2025.

Who developed Monster Prom 4: Monster Con?

Monster Prom 4: Monster Con was developed by Beautiful Glitch.