Compare Rune Factory 3 Special prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Marvelous Inc.. Published by XSEED Games. Released on 9/5/2023. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, RPG, Simulation.

Half a dozen crafting tables, eleven bachelorettes, four seasonal dungeons, and a Rune Points meter that punishes over-farming before lunch: RF3 Special is a cozy life-sim with more interlocking systems than it lets on.

I went in expecting a light farm-and-flirt loop and came out thirty-plus hours later with a color-coded gift schedule for eleven bachelorettes and a spreadsheet tracking which seasonal crops yield Runeys fastest. That should tell you everything you need to know about how this remaster of a 2009 DS game holds up on PC. The core structure splits your in-game day into three clean acts: morning farming below the Sharance Tree, afternoon socializing to build friendship points with the town cast, then dungeon runs until your Rune Points give out. That RP meter is the key mechanical tension nobody warns you about. Rune Points fuel everything from watering crops to swinging a broadsword, so a morning spent over-farming genuinely compromises your dungeon output. Once RP hits zero you burn HP instead, and running out of HP dumps you at the clinic with a bill to pay. It sounds punishing written out, but managing that daily budget is exactly where the interesting decisions live. Harvesting crops also gives you a chance at Runeys, spirits that permanently raise Strength, Vitality, or Intelligence at a faster rate than combat leveling alone, which means farming is not optional flavor text but a real stat engine. The crafting side runs four distinct tracks: forging weapons and tools, cooking meals for buffs and gifts, chemistry for potions and fertilizers, and crafting armor and accessories. Each skill levels independently and gates better recipes, so there is always a next unlock pulling you forward. Combat across the four season-themed dungeon zones is honest about what it is: a brisk hack-and-slash with seven weapon types to level, a handful of equippable magic spells, and a monster-form that trades tool access for grapple-based attacks including a grab, a piledriver, and an aerial corkscrew finisher. Do not expect Souls-level precision. The dodge mechanic feels clunky, enemy AI is not going to outsmart you, and most fights end before strategy becomes necessary. Veterans who found the DS original too easy will appreciate the new "Hell" difficulty, where certain enemies can one-shot a careless player. The four main dungeon zones also cap the content ceiling sooner than you might like: once each is cleared, replay value leans entirely on the farming and relationship systems rather than any new combat ground to explore. The remaster work is functional rather than transformative. Visuals are a clear step up from the muddy DS originals, character models and portraits read well on a 1080p monitor, and the original soundtrack carries over intact. The new Newlywed Mode adds short voiced vignettes for each of the eleven marriage candidates after you complete the main story, a low-calorie bonus that takes about ten minutes per route. What did not get updated: inventory management still feels like a 2009 interface, some settings require a full game restart to change, and the PC version routes resolution and anti-aliasing options through a separate configuration tool launched before boot rather than an in-game menu. Controller support is solid and the game runs fine on modest hardware, but keyboard-and-mouse users will notice the DS-era control logic underneath. Worth flagging for series newcomers: you play as male protagonist Micah only, and all eleven marriage candidates are women. That is the original game unchanged, and if gender or marriage flexibility matters to you, Rune Factory 4 Special or 5 handle it differently. The honest hierarchy is this: if you have already finished Rune Factory 4 Special, RF3 is a step back in mechanical breadth and interface polish. If you missed the DS era entirely or bounced off RF5's rougher edges, this is arguably the better entry point: tighter scope, stronger NPC writing, and a cast charming enough that even players who do not care about farming will keep showing up to hear what Sofia says next. The Runey stat system and the RP budget create more meaningful daily decisions than most life-sims bother to include, and the crafting depth rewards players who want to optimize rather than just relax. Diego, Scout Team

Rune Factory 3 Special
CasualRPGSimulation

Rune Factory 3 Special

Sep 5, 2023Marvelous Inc.XSEED Games
GamerScout Says

Half a dozen crafting tables, eleven bachelorettes, four seasonal dungeons, and a Rune Points meter that punishes over-farming before lunch: RF3 Special is a cozy life-sim with more interlocking systems than it lets on.

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About Rune Factory 3 Special

I went in expecting a light farm-and-flirt loop and came out thirty-plus hours later with a color-coded gift schedule for eleven bachelorettes and a spreadsheet tracking which seasonal crops yield Runeys fastest. That should tell you everything you need to know about how this remaster of a 2009 DS game holds up on PC. The core structure splits your in-game day into three clean acts: morning farming below the Sharance Tree, afternoon socializing to build friendship points with the town cast, then dungeon runs until your Rune Points give out. That RP meter is the key mechanical tension nobody warns you about. Rune Points fuel everything from watering crops to swinging a broadsword, so a morning spent over-farming genuinely compromises your dungeon output. Once RP hits zero you burn HP instead, and running out of HP dumps you at the clinic with a bill to pay. It sounds punishing written out, but managing that daily budget is exactly where the interesting decisions live. Harvesting crops also gives you a chance at Runeys, spirits that permanently raise Strength, Vitality, or Intelligence at a faster rate than combat leveling alone, which means farming is not optional flavor text but a real stat engine. The crafting side runs four distinct tracks: forging weapons and tools, cooking meals for buffs and gifts, chemistry for potions and fertilizers, and crafting armor and accessories. Each skill levels independently and gates better recipes, so there is always a next unlock pulling you forward. Combat across the four season-themed dungeon zones is honest about what it is: a brisk hack-and-slash with seven weapon types to level, a handful of equippable magic spells, and a monster-form that trades tool access for grapple-based attacks including a grab, a piledriver, and an aerial corkscrew finisher. Do not expect Souls-level precision. The dodge mechanic feels clunky, enemy AI is not going to outsmart you, and most fights end before strategy becomes necessary. Veterans who found the DS original too easy will appreciate the new "Hell" difficulty, where certain enemies can one-shot a careless player. The four main dungeon zones also cap the content ceiling sooner than you might like: once each is cleared, replay value leans entirely on the farming and relationship systems rather than any new combat ground to explore. The remaster work is functional rather than transformative. Visuals are a clear step up from the muddy DS originals, character models and portraits read well on a 1080p monitor, and the original soundtrack carries over intact. The new Newlywed Mode adds short voiced vignettes for each of the eleven marriage candidates after you complete the main story, a low-calorie bonus that takes about ten minutes per route. What did not get updated: inventory management still feels like a 2009 interface, some settings require a full game restart to change, and the PC version routes resolution and anti-aliasing options through a separate configuration tool launched before boot rather than an in-game menu. Controller support is solid and the game runs fine on modest hardware, but keyboard-and-mouse users will notice the DS-era control logic underneath. Worth flagging for series newcomers: you play as male protagonist Micah only, and all eleven marriage candidates are women. That is the original game unchanged, and if gender or marriage flexibility matters to you, Rune Factory 4 Special or 5 handle it differently. The honest hierarchy is this: if you have already finished Rune Factory 4 Special, RF3 is a step back in mechanical breadth and interface polish. If you missed the DS era entirely or bounced off RF5's rougher edges, this is arguably the better entry point: tighter scope, stronger NPC writing, and a cast charming enough that even players who do not care about farming will keep showing up to hear what Sofia says next. The Runey stat system and the RP budget create more meaningful daily decisions than most life-sims bother to include, and the crafting depth rewards players who want to optimize rather than just relax. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:indieLife-Sim RPGMonster TamingSkill-Based CraftingRune Points ManagementHell DifficultyNewlywed ModeAction Dungeon CrawlerRelationship Sim

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 4 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Storage
4 GB available space
Graphics
Intel Iris Xe Graphics
Processor
Intel Core i5-1135G7

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Memory
16 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Storage
4 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GTX 1650Q
Processor
Intel Core i5-9300H

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Game Info

Developer
Marvelous Inc.
Publisher
XSEED Games
Release Date
Sep 5, 2023

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Rune Factory 3 Special is available on PC.

When was Rune Factory 3 Special released?

Rune Factory 3 Special was released on 5 September 2023.

Who developed Rune Factory 3 Special?

Rune Factory 3 Special was developed by Marvelous Inc. and published by XSEED Games.