
Spirited Heart Deluxe
A Princess Maker-style raising sim wearing fantasy dress-up clothes: slim on strategy depth, but 32 possible endings give completionists a tidy checklist to chase.
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About Spirited Heart Deluxe
My spreadsheet instincts fired up the moment I saw the job progression tree in Spirited Heart Deluxe. Each of the 20 jobs raises specific stats, and those stats gate access to more advanced careers, which means your first few weeks of in-game time function like a quiet build-order decision. Pick Farmer early and you bulk up physical skills fast. Chase the Artist path and your creative attributes climb, but your coin purse stays thin until you can unlock something better. For a casual life sim, that underlying resource loop is more considered than it looks on the surface. The game draws clear inspiration from Princess Maker, putting you in control of a young adult woman through ten in-game years rather than raising a child from scratch. You pick one of three races at the start: human Ruko, elf Trixi, or demon Hellen. Each has different base attributes and triggers unique dialogue branches and random events across the playthrough. The Deluxe edition folds in the original same-sex romance expansion, giving you six male and six female potential partners, two per race. Character reactions shift depending on your chosen race, and the game claims over 100 distinct dialogue combinations across those pairings. A per-race Goddess mission also activates mid-run if you hit certain conditions, gating special endings only available to each specific race. All of that adds up to a respectable reason-to-replay structure on paper. Here is where I have to be straight with you, though. The core gameplay loop is repetitive in a way that patience-limited players will notice quickly. Work is resolved either instantly or through an optional dice mini-game, and the dice mini-game introduces a heavy RNG factor that can drain your morale and health stats through no fault of your own decision-making. There is no traditional failure state, meaning you cannot soft-lock yourself, but the randomness can make certain runs feel more like waiting than playing. Community sentiment on Steam sits at roughly 45 percent positive across 53 reviews, which is a mixed signal worth taking seriously. Common complaints center on limited freedom of action and the feeling that the romance and career paths are too siloed from each other: you can optimize for a job ending or a marriage ending, but threading both simultaneously is structurally discouraged. For the right player, none of that is disqualifying. If you have ever enjoyed a stat-juggling life sim like Princess Maker or the lighter end of the Harvest Moon family, Spirited Heart Deluxe scratches a specific itch. The tutorial is accessible and the mouse-only controls keep the barrier to entry near zero. The anime art style is competent, particularly the male cast designs, though TV Tropes community commentary flags an art-style inconsistency between the male and female love interest sprites that hints at different artists working on each set. There is no mod ecosystem to speak of, no post-launch content updates of consequence, and the 32-ending completion hunt is the primary long-term hook. It is a small, old indie project built in Ren'Py, and it plays like one. Go in with calibrated expectations and it delivers a relaxed couple of evenings. Go in expecting Stardew Valley depth and you will bounce off it hard within an hour. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows XP
- Memory
- 512 MB RAM
- Graphics
- DirectX or OpenGL compatible card
- Processor
- 1Ghz
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Game Info
- Developer
- Winter Wolves
- Publisher
- Winter Wolves
- Release Date
- May 29, 2014






