Compare Niche - a Genetics Survival Game prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Stray Fawn Studio. Published by Stray Fawn Studio. Released on 9/21/2017. Available on PC. Genres: Indie, Simulation, Strategy.

Turn-based survival meets real genetics: breed a species from scratch and watch natural selection eat your bad decisions alive.

Niche is a turn-based strategy and simulation game where you manage a small population of animals, guiding their survival across generations by making deliberate breeding choices. Every individual in your pack carries a gene pool drawn from real Mendelian genetics principles - dominant and recessive alleles, homozygous risks, and trait expression that can flip a healthy lineage into an inbred dead end within a few generations. Predators, climate shifts, and disease outbreaks add pressure from the outside, while your own genetic mistakes pile up from within. It is not a textbook, but it does teach you to think like one. The core loop is tight and surprisingly tense. Each turn you decide who breeds with whom, which tiles your animals explore, and whether you push into new territory or consolidate. Food scarcity forces hard calls: do you keep the individual with a rare immunity gene even though it has poor foraging stats? Do you sacrifice genetic diversity for short-term strength? These are real trade-offs, not artificial ones, and the roguelike structure means a bad streak of predator encounters or a poorly timed cold snap can wipe generations of careful work in a couple of turns. Losing feels instructive rather than cheap, which is the mark of a well-tuned strategy loop. For newcomers, the tutorial is genuinely respectful. It introduces genetics concepts step by step without dumbing them down, and the visual gene display makes inheritance legible at a glance. A color-coded trait panel shows exactly what each animal contributes to offspring before you commit to a pairing, which removes the guesswork and keeps the decision-making honest. Someone with zero biology background can be running a coherent breeding strategy within an hour. Someone who actually remembers their Punnett squares will find the depth goes further than the art style suggests. The game does have limits worth naming. The AI-driven threats, while effective early on, do not scale with the same complexity as the genetics system. Once you understand which traits to prioritize for a given biome, the challenge flattens somewhat. There is no multiplayer, the mod ecosystem is modest compared to deeper strategy titles, and long sessions can feel repetitive once a strategy clicks into place. The visual presentation is cheerful and approachable, which works for the educational angle but may undersell the mechanical seriousness to players browsing screenshots alone. Niche sits in a rare spot: a strategy game with genuine educational grounding that does not sacrifice playability for curriculum. If you have younger players in your household it works as a soft introduction to both genetics and strategic planning. If you are a sim-strategy player looking for something lighter between grand-strategy sessions, it delivers focused, meaningful decisions in short bursts. The 86 percent positive Steam rating across thousands of reviews reflects a game that consistently does what it promises, which in this genre is worth more than it sounds. Diego, Scout Team

Niche - a Genetics Survival Game
IndieSimulationStrategy

Niche - a Genetics Survival Game

Sep 21, 2017Stray Fawn Studio
GamerScout Says

Turn-based survival meets real genetics: breed a species from scratch and watch natural selection eat your bad decisions alive.

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About Niche - a Genetics Survival Game

Niche is a turn-based strategy and simulation game where you manage a small population of animals, guiding their survival across generations by making deliberate breeding choices. Every individual in your pack carries a gene pool drawn from real Mendelian genetics principles - dominant and recessive alleles, homozygous risks, and trait expression that can flip a healthy lineage into an inbred dead end within a few generations. Predators, climate shifts, and disease outbreaks add pressure from the outside, while your own genetic mistakes pile up from within. It is not a textbook, but it does teach you to think like one. The core loop is tight and surprisingly tense. Each turn you decide who breeds with whom, which tiles your animals explore, and whether you push into new territory or consolidate. Food scarcity forces hard calls: do you keep the individual with a rare immunity gene even though it has poor foraging stats? Do you sacrifice genetic diversity for short-term strength? These are real trade-offs, not artificial ones, and the roguelike structure means a bad streak of predator encounters or a poorly timed cold snap can wipe generations of careful work in a couple of turns. Losing feels instructive rather than cheap, which is the mark of a well-tuned strategy loop. For newcomers, the tutorial is genuinely respectful. It introduces genetics concepts step by step without dumbing them down, and the visual gene display makes inheritance legible at a glance. A color-coded trait panel shows exactly what each animal contributes to offspring before you commit to a pairing, which removes the guesswork and keeps the decision-making honest. Someone with zero biology background can be running a coherent breeding strategy within an hour. Someone who actually remembers their Punnett squares will find the depth goes further than the art style suggests. The game does have limits worth naming. The AI-driven threats, while effective early on, do not scale with the same complexity as the genetics system. Once you understand which traits to prioritize for a given biome, the challenge flattens somewhat. There is no multiplayer, the mod ecosystem is modest compared to deeper strategy titles, and long sessions can feel repetitive once a strategy clicks into place. The visual presentation is cheerful and approachable, which works for the educational angle but may undersell the mechanical seriousness to players browsing screenshots alone. Niche sits in a rare spot: a strategy game with genuine educational grounding that does not sacrifice playability for curriculum. If you have younger players in your household it works as a soft introduction to both genetics and strategic planning. If you are a sim-strategy player looking for something lighter between grand-strategy sessions, it delivers focused, meaningful decisions in short bursts. The 86 percent positive Steam rating across thousands of reviews reflects a game that consistently does what it promises, which in this genre is worth more than it sounds. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamGenetics MechanicsPopulation ManagementTurn-Based SurvivalRoguelike StrategyEducational SimBreeding SystemGenerational ProgressionBeginner Friendly

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
86%(5,183)

Game Info

Developer
Stray Fawn Studio
Publisher
Stray Fawn Studio
Release Date
Sep 21, 2017

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