Compare The New Queen prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Warfare Studios. Published by Warfare Studios. Released on 1/13/2017. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie, RPG.

A 16-bit RPG-Maker adventure with a political heart: if you've got a soft spot for small-studio fantasy storytelling and a party of three very distinct companions, this one is quietly worth your time.

I have a weakness for the kind of RPG that fits inside 200 MB and still tries to say something about loyalty and legitimacy. The New Queen is exactly that kind of game. Built in the RPG Maker tradition that Warfare Studios has been quietly refining across dozens of titles, it plants you inside a kingdom called Uboro under siege, not from an army but from a revolution, one that accuses Queen Lorelai of reaching the throne through fraud. That's a more interesting hook than most budget-tier fantasy bothers with, and the game leans into it. Your active party is a trio with real personality friction: Victoria, Lorelai's adopted daughter and the heavy-hitting warrior of the group; Alkor, a reformed outlaw whose loyalty was purchased but whose arc asks whether that makes it lesser; and Celine, raised by white mages, which means your healing corner is covered but the game uses her background to color how she reads the world. The three-character party setup is classic JRPG comfort food, turn-based and readable, and while the combat won't surprise anyone who's spent time in the genre, it gives you enough role differentiation to make positioning and skill choices feel meaningful rather than automatic. What works here is the writing's sincerity. This is not an ironic or self-aware game. It believes in its queen, it believes in its rebellion, and it asks you to hold both in tension. For a game sitting in the casual-RPG tier, that earnestness is rarer than it should be. The 16-bit visual style is clean and intentional rather than lazy, and the soundscape carries the emotional weight the pixel art can't always shoulder on its own. I've found that Warfare Studios games tend to compose for mood rather than hype, and The New Queen fits that pattern. The honest caveats: Steam's community has landed this at a mixed reception, sitting just under 60 percent positive across a small review pool. The criticisms that surface most often point to a short runtime, a pace that won't satisfy players expecting dungeon complexity or deep mechanical layering. If you come in wanting sprawl, side-quest density, or combat depth in the vein of something like Ara Fell or Cosmic Star Heroine, you'll find The New Queen a lighter meal. It knows what it is, a focused narrative RPG with a specific political question at its center, and it doesn't pretend otherwise. Whether that focus reads as discipline or limitation depends entirely on what you're in the mood for. The audience here is someone who enjoys a contained, story-first RPG, the kind you finish in an evening or two, where the character dynamics matter more than the loot table. If that description sounds like a Friday night you'd actually enjoy, The New Queen earns its place in that niche with more craft than its budget implies. Kai, Scout Team

The New Queen
AdventureCasualIndieRPG

The New Queen

Jan 13, 2017Warfare Studios
GamerScout Says

A 16-bit RPG-Maker adventure with a political heart: if you've got a soft spot for small-studio fantasy storytelling and a party of three very distinct companions, this one is quietly worth your time.

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About The New Queen

I have a weakness for the kind of RPG that fits inside 200 MB and still tries to say something about loyalty and legitimacy. The New Queen is exactly that kind of game. Built in the RPG Maker tradition that Warfare Studios has been quietly refining across dozens of titles, it plants you inside a kingdom called Uboro under siege, not from an army but from a revolution, one that accuses Queen Lorelai of reaching the throne through fraud. That's a more interesting hook than most budget-tier fantasy bothers with, and the game leans into it. Your active party is a trio with real personality friction: Victoria, Lorelai's adopted daughter and the heavy-hitting warrior of the group; Alkor, a reformed outlaw whose loyalty was purchased but whose arc asks whether that makes it lesser; and Celine, raised by white mages, which means your healing corner is covered but the game uses her background to color how she reads the world. The three-character party setup is classic JRPG comfort food, turn-based and readable, and while the combat won't surprise anyone who's spent time in the genre, it gives you enough role differentiation to make positioning and skill choices feel meaningful rather than automatic. What works here is the writing's sincerity. This is not an ironic or self-aware game. It believes in its queen, it believes in its rebellion, and it asks you to hold both in tension. For a game sitting in the casual-RPG tier, that earnestness is rarer than it should be. The 16-bit visual style is clean and intentional rather than lazy, and the soundscape carries the emotional weight the pixel art can't always shoulder on its own. I've found that Warfare Studios games tend to compose for mood rather than hype, and The New Queen fits that pattern. The honest caveats: Steam's community has landed this at a mixed reception, sitting just under 60 percent positive across a small review pool. The criticisms that surface most often point to a short runtime, a pace that won't satisfy players expecting dungeon complexity or deep mechanical layering. If you come in wanting sprawl, side-quest density, or combat depth in the vein of something like Ara Fell or Cosmic Star Heroine, you'll find The New Queen a lighter meal. It knows what it is, a focused narrative RPG with a specific political question at its center, and it doesn't pretend otherwise. Whether that focus reads as discipline or limitation depends entirely on what you're in the mood for. The audience here is someone who enjoys a contained, story-first RPG, the kind you finish in an evening or two, where the character dynamics matter more than the loot table. If that description sounds like a Friday night you'd actually enjoy, The New Queen earns its place in that niche with more craft than its budget implies. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayercontroller-supporttrading-cardstier:sub-5RPG MakerFemale ProtagonistParty-BasedTurn-Based CombatPolitical NarrativeShort Runtime16-bit StyleStory-First

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP/Windows Vista/Windows 7/8/10
Memory
128 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
200 MB available space
Graphics
DirectX 9.0 Compatible
Processor
1.6 GHz
Sound Card
DirectX 9.0 Compatible Sound

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Game Info

Developer
Warfare Studios
Publisher
Warfare Studios
Release Date
Jan 13, 2017

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What platforms is The New Queen available on?

The New Queen is available on PC.

When was The New Queen released?

The New Queen was released on 13 January 2017.

Who developed The New Queen?

The New Queen was developed by Warfare Studios.