Compare RPG Tycoon prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Skatanic Studios. Published by Macrocosmic Software. Released on 2/12/2016. Available on PC, Mac. Genres: Adventure, Indie, RPG, Simulation, Strategy.

A kingdom-management sim with a 50/50 split on Steam reviews - charming enough for casual tycoon fans, shallow enough to frustrate anyone expecting real strategic depth.

My strategy instincts told me this one had potential: a tycoon loop wrapped around fantasy kingdom-building, hero management, and choose-your-own-adventure quests. The pitch lands. The execution is where things get complicated, and I want to be straight with you about that before you commit. The core loop runs like this: you start with a single plot of land, hire a hero, house them, and send them out on quick quests to generate fame and gold. That fame pulls settlers into your kingdom, those settlers spend money in shops and taverns, and that income funds expansion into new buildings and territory. There are over 60 buildings and decorations to place, two quest tiers - quick quests for steady income and longer epic adventures with tabletop-style branching events - and competing AI kingdoms to benchmark yourself against across three difficulty settings and four terrain types. A sandbox mode strips away the financial pressure entirely if you just want to lay out a pretty medieval town. On paper, that is a solid foundation. Where the depth starts to thin out is in the decision-making layer. Hero management is surface-level: you hire, assign, and watch results tick over off-screen. The happiness system for heroes - which tracks pay satisfaction and entertainment access in your kingdom - is present but reviewers noted it rarely produces meaningful consequences. Quest variety runs dry faster than you would like; the epic quest branching events recycle quickly, and the building catalog, while numerically large, suffers from too many visually near-identical structures that make the build menu harder to parse than it should be. The map size is also constrained, which limits late-game sprawl. These are the core complaints that pushed Steam reviews to a 50 percent split across roughly 410 responses - not a disaster, but a clear signal that expectations need calibrating. The mod ecosystem is the genuine bright spot from a systems perspective. All game data loads from XML files and spritesheets, meaning anyone comfortable with basic XML editing can build new quests, heroes, buildings, and items without touching code. The Steam Workshop and an in-game quest editor mean that the community can, in theory, paper over the content-depth problem the base game leaves exposed. Whether that community is still active is a separate question - the game launched in 2016 and concurrent player counts are minimal today, so Workshop output is limited. The Supply and Demand DLC adds a resource layer requiring you to source, produce, and trade materials with rival kingdoms, which genuinely expands the economic management side and is worth factoring into the purchase decision. For newcomers to tycoon games, this is actually a reasonable starting point. The interface is clean, the tip system introduced at full release handles onboarding better than the early access version did, and the sandbox mode removes the pressure that makes tycoon games intimidating. Kairosoft fans on PC and anyone who bounced off more complex city-builders will find a comfortable pace here. Strategy veterans, though, will hit the ceiling within a few hours and start looking at what Big Pharma or similar titles are doing with the same amount of screen space. Bring modest expectations and, if it looks interesting, grab the Supply and Demand bundle rather than the base game alone. Diego, Scout Team

RPG Tycoon
AdventureIndieRPGSimulationStrategy

RPG Tycoon

Feb 12, 2016Skatanic StudiosMacrocosmic Software
GamerScout Says

A kingdom-management sim with a 50/50 split on Steam reviews - charming enough for casual tycoon fans, shallow enough to frustrate anyone expecting real strategic depth.

PCMac
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $3.35

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 RPG Tycoon

My strategy instincts told me this one had potential: a tycoon loop wrapped around fantasy kingdom-building, hero management, and choose-your-own-adventure quests. The pitch lands. The execution is where things get complicated, and I want to be straight with you about that before you commit. The core loop runs like this: you start with a single plot of land, hire a hero, house them, and send them out on quick quests to generate fame and gold. That fame pulls settlers into your kingdom, those settlers spend money in shops and taverns, and that income funds expansion into new buildings and territory. There are over 60 buildings and decorations to place, two quest tiers - quick quests for steady income and longer epic adventures with tabletop-style branching events - and competing AI kingdoms to benchmark yourself against across three difficulty settings and four terrain types. A sandbox mode strips away the financial pressure entirely if you just want to lay out a pretty medieval town. On paper, that is a solid foundation. Where the depth starts to thin out is in the decision-making layer. Hero management is surface-level: you hire, assign, and watch results tick over off-screen. The happiness system for heroes - which tracks pay satisfaction and entertainment access in your kingdom - is present but reviewers noted it rarely produces meaningful consequences. Quest variety runs dry faster than you would like; the epic quest branching events recycle quickly, and the building catalog, while numerically large, suffers from too many visually near-identical structures that make the build menu harder to parse than it should be. The map size is also constrained, which limits late-game sprawl. These are the core complaints that pushed Steam reviews to a 50 percent split across roughly 410 responses - not a disaster, but a clear signal that expectations need calibrating. The mod ecosystem is the genuine bright spot from a systems perspective. All game data loads from XML files and spritesheets, meaning anyone comfortable with basic XML editing can build new quests, heroes, buildings, and items without touching code. The Steam Workshop and an in-game quest editor mean that the community can, in theory, paper over the content-depth problem the base game leaves exposed. Whether that community is still active is a separate question - the game launched in 2016 and concurrent player counts are minimal today, so Workshop output is limited. The Supply and Demand DLC adds a resource layer requiring you to source, produce, and trade materials with rival kingdoms, which genuinely expands the economic management side and is worth factoring into the purchase decision. For newcomers to tycoon games, this is actually a reasonable starting point. The interface is clean, the tip system introduced at full release handles onboarding better than the early access version did, and the sandbox mode removes the pressure that makes tycoon games intimidating. Kairosoft fans on PC and anyone who bounced off more complex city-builders will find a comfortable pace here. Strategy veterans, though, will hit the ceiling within a few hours and start looking at what Big Pharma or similar titles are doing with the same amount of screen space. Bring modest expectations and, if it looks interesting, grab the Supply and Demand bundle rather than the base game alone. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardsworkshopcloud-savestier:sub-5Kingdom ManagementHero HiringQuest EditorXML ModdingSandbox ModeAI RivalsSupply and Demand DLCCasual TycoonKairosoft-like

Steam Deck & Linux

ProtonDB Bronze

Runs on Linux but with crashes or issues. Based on 3 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Microsoft® Windows® XP, Windows Server 2008, Windows Vista® Home Premium, Business, Ultimate, or Enterprise (including 64 bit editions) with Service Pack 2, Windows 7, Windows 8 Classic or Windows 10
Memory
512 MB RAM
Storage
180 MB available space
Processor
2.33GHz or faster x86-compatible processor, or Intel Atom™ 1.6GHz or faster processor for netbook class devices

DLC & Add-ons for RPG Tycoon1

Expansions, DLC packs and add-on content for this game. Click any item to see store offers.

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on RPG Tycoon.

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Skatanic Studios
Publisher
Macrocosmic Software
Release Date
Feb 12, 2016

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

Price History

2026-06-103.35(lowest)

More from Skatanic Studios

Buy smarter: helpful guides

Looking for more? See games like RPG Tycoon

Frequently asked questions about RPG Tycoon

How much does RPG Tycoon cost?

RPG Tycoon 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 RPG Tycoon cheapest?

Compare RPG Tycoon 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 RPG Tycoon available on?

RPG Tycoon is available on PC, Mac.

When was RPG Tycoon released?

RPG Tycoon was released on 12 February 2016.

Who developed RPG Tycoon?

RPG Tycoon was developed by Skatanic Studios and published by Macrocosmic Software.