Compare Princess Farmer prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Samobee Games. Published by Whitethorn Games. Released on 3/31/2022. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Indie.

A five-hour cozy puzzle that does something genuinely clever with match-3, wrapped in pixel-art warmth and a lo-fi chiptune score that you will absolutely leave on loop.

I have a soft spot for small teams making precise, intentional things, and Samobee Games, a wife-wife duo building games in the mountains of British Columbia, lands exactly in that territory. Princess Farmer is not trying to be Candy Crush. The core mechanic asks you to physically run your bunny character left and right across the top of a vegetable grid, hoisting up whole columns and carrying up to five veggies at a time before replanting them to engineer horizontal, vertical, or diagonal matches. It is a stack-management puzzle dressed in overalls, and it takes a few rounds before the spatial logic clicks in a satisfying way. When it does, chaining combos feels genuinely earned rather than lucky. The nine episodes are structured like a magical-girl anime, each one running between twenty minutes and an hour depending on your chosen playstyle. You pick from Action Bunny, Puzzle Bunny, or a balanced mode, though in practice the mechanical difference is subtle enough that most players will notice little beyond a pace shift. Level goals rotate usefully across the run: timed score chases, specific veggie harvests, requests from creatures, danger zones that punish certain matches, and storm-mode versus encounters where you race to fill a meter and drop the Grumpy Block on your opponent's field. That variety keeps the roughly five-hour story mode from feeling repetitive. There is also a Quick Play mode after credits, where you survive as long as possible before Grumpy Block creeps up from the bottom, which adds a genuinely replayable arcade layer. The visual novel side is lighter than the puzzle side. Dialogue choices shape your friendship level with characters like Garlic, the animal-whisperer bunny, and Rowan, the mysteriously mobile shopkeeper, and a strong enough bond unlocks outfits as gifts. The writing is warm and unpretentious, carrying a sincere message about self-discovery, and the LGBTQ-inclusive character writing has been noted warmly by the community. But reviewers have flagged that the dialogue lacks the depth to stand on its own as a narrative experience: it is more connective tissue between puzzle stages than a story you will quote later. The AI co-op partner that occasionally joins you mid-episode is the game's most consistent friction point, frequently disrupting carefully planned stacks rather than helping, and several reviewers across multiple outlets flagged this as genuinely frustrating. Human local co-op through Remote Play Together fares better, though coordination matters a lot. The soundtrack, produced by Astra and blending chiptune with lo-fi beats, is exactly what you want in the background of a session like this: bubbly without being intrusive, looping without becoming grating, with additional tracks from Chloe Hotline and The Crystal Furs adding small moments of texture. The pixel art is vibrant and carefully detailed at the sprite level, all saturated color and expressive bunny faces. The unlockable Hare Dyes and outfits earned through Heart Coins offer cosmetic personalization, though the shop prices run steep relative to the coins a single playthrough generates, so completionists should expect grind. This is a five-hour experience that knows its scope and, mostly, respects it. The hybrid design is genuinely novel even if neither half reaches the ceiling of a dedicated match-3 or a proper visual novel. For players who want something warm to fill an evening, who respond to handcrafted pixel work and a thoughtful lo-fi score, and who are not expecting the narrative weight of a full VN, it delivers cleanly. Come for the puzzle hook, stay for the aesthetic. Kai, Scout Team

Princess Farmer
CasualIndie

Princess Farmer

Mar 31, 2022Samobee GamesWhitethorn Games
GamerScout Says

A five-hour cozy puzzle that does something genuinely clever with match-3, wrapped in pixel-art warmth and a lo-fi chiptune score that you will absolutely leave on loop.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Princess Farmer

I have a soft spot for small teams making precise, intentional things, and Samobee Games, a wife-wife duo building games in the mountains of British Columbia, lands exactly in that territory. Princess Farmer is not trying to be Candy Crush. The core mechanic asks you to physically run your bunny character left and right across the top of a vegetable grid, hoisting up whole columns and carrying up to five veggies at a time before replanting them to engineer horizontal, vertical, or diagonal matches. It is a stack-management puzzle dressed in overalls, and it takes a few rounds before the spatial logic clicks in a satisfying way. When it does, chaining combos feels genuinely earned rather than lucky. The nine episodes are structured like a magical-girl anime, each one running between twenty minutes and an hour depending on your chosen playstyle. You pick from Action Bunny, Puzzle Bunny, or a balanced mode, though in practice the mechanical difference is subtle enough that most players will notice little beyond a pace shift. Level goals rotate usefully across the run: timed score chases, specific veggie harvests, requests from creatures, danger zones that punish certain matches, and storm-mode versus encounters where you race to fill a meter and drop the Grumpy Block on your opponent's field. That variety keeps the roughly five-hour story mode from feeling repetitive. There is also a Quick Play mode after credits, where you survive as long as possible before Grumpy Block creeps up from the bottom, which adds a genuinely replayable arcade layer. The visual novel side is lighter than the puzzle side. Dialogue choices shape your friendship level with characters like Garlic, the animal-whisperer bunny, and Rowan, the mysteriously mobile shopkeeper, and a strong enough bond unlocks outfits as gifts. The writing is warm and unpretentious, carrying a sincere message about self-discovery, and the LGBTQ-inclusive character writing has been noted warmly by the community. But reviewers have flagged that the dialogue lacks the depth to stand on its own as a narrative experience: it is more connective tissue between puzzle stages than a story you will quote later. The AI co-op partner that occasionally joins you mid-episode is the game's most consistent friction point, frequently disrupting carefully planned stacks rather than helping, and several reviewers across multiple outlets flagged this as genuinely frustrating. Human local co-op through Remote Play Together fares better, though coordination matters a lot. The soundtrack, produced by Astra and blending chiptune with lo-fi beats, is exactly what you want in the background of a session like this: bubbly without being intrusive, looping without becoming grating, with additional tracks from Chloe Hotline and The Crystal Furs adding small moments of texture. The pixel art is vibrant and carefully detailed at the sprite level, all saturated color and expressive bunny faces. The unlockable Hare Dyes and outfits earned through Heart Coins offer cosmetic personalization, though the shop prices run steep relative to the coins a single playthrough generates, so completionists should expect grind. This is a five-hour experience that knows its scope and, mostly, respects it. The hybrid design is genuinely novel even if neither half reaches the ceiling of a dedicated match-3 or a proper visual novel. For players who want something warm to fill an evening, who respond to handcrafted pixel work and a thoughtful lo-fi score, and who are not expecting the narrative weight of a full VN, it delivers cleanly. Come for the puzzle hook, stay for the aesthetic. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayercooplocal-coopachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:sub-5Stack ManagementEpisodicLo-Fi SoundtrackRelationship SimLGBTQ-InclusivePixel Art CozyQuick Play ModeVersus Puzzles

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Gold

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified. Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 4 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP, Vista, 7 or later
Memory
32 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
700 MB available space
Graphics
DirectX 9 compliant graphics card
Processor
64bit Intel compatible Dual Core CPU
Sound Card
DirectX 9 compatible sound card, or integrated sound chip

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Game Info

Developer
Samobee Games
Publisher
Whitethorn Games
Release Date
Mar 31, 2022

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What platforms is Princess Farmer available on?

Princess Farmer is available on PC.

When was Princess Farmer released?

Princess Farmer was released on 31 March 2022.

Who developed Princess Farmer?

Princess Farmer was developed by Samobee Games and published by Whitethorn Games.