Compare Pawn Planet prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Gambol Games. Published by Gambol Games. Released on 12/5/2025. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Casual, Indie, Simulation.

Running a galactic pawn shop sounds chaotic on paper, and at 74% positive reviews it almost delivers on that premise - bugs and all.

I put a few hours into Pawn Planet expecting a casual diversion and found something genuinely more layered than the price tag implies, though with enough rough edges to keep it firmly in the 'cautious buy' column. The core loop is classic shop-sim stuff: alien customers walk in, you negotiate a price for whatever junk they want to sell or buy, you source parts to repair broken items, and you reinvest profits into shop upgrades. What the sci-fi skin actually adds is real tonal character. The alien cast has distinct bargaining personalities - some haggle aggressively, others are stubborn and slow - and the customer relationship system means regularly cheating a repeat visitor eventually dries up that income stream. That kind of low-level consequence-tracking is where sims like this sink or float, and here it mostly floats. The auction system is the highlight reel moment. You travel to auction planets and bid on storage units blind, which is exactly the gambling mechanic that makes the Storage Wars genre fun. The problem is that the travel system is genuinely buggy in the current build - multiple players have reported planets becoming greyed out and unselectable after unlock notifications fire correctly. Repair mechanics also suffer from pacing issues: a single repair machine that locks items away for a full in-game day, with upgrades only trimming that to one day rather than removing the wait, creates a cash flow bottleneck early on that feels punishing rather than strategic. The shooting missions that occasionally unlock are a side activity that most players will want to skip - the penalty for dying in one is losing your entry fee, a secondary cash deduction, and your full inventory, which is a brutal and disproportionate risk-reward swing. For strategy and sim fans assessing entry complexity: Pawn Planet is actually accessible. The negotiation loop is manual typing rather than a slider, which some players find tedious during busy trading windows, but the math involved is simple enough that even someone new to the genre will read margins correctly within an hour. The mission structure guides progression without boxing you in - you can lean into being a pure flip trader, a repair specialist, or a high-roller at storage auctions, and the game does not punish you for ignoring the other income streams. The UI needs polish, particularly the lack of a one-click 'accept offer' button during customer deals, but nothing here requires spreadsheet literacy. The art direction is clean and colorful, the alien designs are readable without feeling generic, and the soundtrack earns genuine praise in community threads. The humor is aimed squarely at players who do not mind slightly juvenile NPC names alongside genuinely funny alien encounter writing. The game launched into full release in December 2025 after an earlier Early Access phase, but the current state still carries unresolved bugs from that period: inventory items disappearing, NPC clients getting stuck in loops requiring repeated reloads, and the travel system issues already mentioned. Gambol Games has shown responsiveness to bug reports - at least one significant inventory issue was patched within days of being flagged - which is the right signal but does not yet add up to a fully stable release. If you enjoy Recettear-style shop management or the storage auction subgenre and can tolerate an indie that is still tightening its bolts, there is a genuinely fun economic loop here. Go in knowing the rough edges are real, not cosmetic, and you will probably find enough to justify the price. Diego, Scout Team

Pawn Planet
ActionCasualIndieSimulation

Pawn Planet

Dec 5, 2025Gambol Games
GamerScout Says

Running a galactic pawn shop sounds chaotic on paper, and at 74% positive reviews it almost delivers on that premise - bugs and all.

PC
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Historical low: $1.33

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About Pawn Planet

I put a few hours into Pawn Planet expecting a casual diversion and found something genuinely more layered than the price tag implies, though with enough rough edges to keep it firmly in the 'cautious buy' column. The core loop is classic shop-sim stuff: alien customers walk in, you negotiate a price for whatever junk they want to sell or buy, you source parts to repair broken items, and you reinvest profits into shop upgrades. What the sci-fi skin actually adds is real tonal character. The alien cast has distinct bargaining personalities - some haggle aggressively, others are stubborn and slow - and the customer relationship system means regularly cheating a repeat visitor eventually dries up that income stream. That kind of low-level consequence-tracking is where sims like this sink or float, and here it mostly floats. The auction system is the highlight reel moment. You travel to auction planets and bid on storage units blind, which is exactly the gambling mechanic that makes the Storage Wars genre fun. The problem is that the travel system is genuinely buggy in the current build - multiple players have reported planets becoming greyed out and unselectable after unlock notifications fire correctly. Repair mechanics also suffer from pacing issues: a single repair machine that locks items away for a full in-game day, with upgrades only trimming that to one day rather than removing the wait, creates a cash flow bottleneck early on that feels punishing rather than strategic. The shooting missions that occasionally unlock are a side activity that most players will want to skip - the penalty for dying in one is losing your entry fee, a secondary cash deduction, and your full inventory, which is a brutal and disproportionate risk-reward swing. For strategy and sim fans assessing entry complexity: Pawn Planet is actually accessible. The negotiation loop is manual typing rather than a slider, which some players find tedious during busy trading windows, but the math involved is simple enough that even someone new to the genre will read margins correctly within an hour. The mission structure guides progression without boxing you in - you can lean into being a pure flip trader, a repair specialist, or a high-roller at storage auctions, and the game does not punish you for ignoring the other income streams. The UI needs polish, particularly the lack of a one-click 'accept offer' button during customer deals, but nothing here requires spreadsheet literacy. The art direction is clean and colorful, the alien designs are readable without feeling generic, and the soundtrack earns genuine praise in community threads. The humor is aimed squarely at players who do not mind slightly juvenile NPC names alongside genuinely funny alien encounter writing. The game launched into full release in December 2025 after an earlier Early Access phase, but the current state still carries unresolved bugs from that period: inventory items disappearing, NPC clients getting stuck in loops requiring repeated reloads, and the travel system issues already mentioned. Gambol Games has shown responsiveness to bug reports - at least one significant inventory issue was patched within days of being flagged - which is the right signal but does not yet add up to a fully stable release. If you enjoy Recettear-style shop management or the storage auction subgenre and can tolerate an indie that is still tightening its bolts, there is a genuinely fun economic loop here. Go in knowing the rough edges are real, not cosmetic, and you will probably find enough to justify the price. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardstier:sub-5Shop FlipperAuction RiskRepair MechanicsAlien NPCsNPC Relationship SystemNegotiation LoopSci-Fi SettingBug-Prone Launch

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Unsupported

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 or newer, 64-bit
Memory
8 GB RAM
Storage
8 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 1660
Processor
Intel i5-11400F

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 or newer, 64-bit
Memory
16 GB RAM
Storage
8 GB available space

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Game Info

Developer
Gambol Games
Publisher
Gambol Games
Release Date
Dec 5, 2025

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Price History

2026-06-081.33(lowest)

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Where can I buy Pawn Planet cheapest?

Compare Pawn Planet 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 Pawn Planet available on?

Pawn Planet is available on PC.

When was Pawn Planet released?

Pawn Planet was released on 5 December 2025.

Who developed Pawn Planet?

Pawn Planet was developed by Gambol Games.