Review – Shopping Tycoon

Shopping Tycoon is a recently released indie title from DreamSoftGames, a small studio out of Barcelona, Spain.

Shopping Tycoon is developed on the Unity engine originally as another project for mobile in 2016 but ended up being produced and released on Steam for PC instead. The game was quite clearly intended for mobile or tablets, with large buttons, simplistic menu layouts and a pinch-to-zoom mechanic seen in every smartphone from the last decade.

It is hard to move around the game environment as a result, and there is so much clutter and indistinguishable sprites on screen at any given time that the whole experience playing is unpleasant.

The graphics and assets used are very poor. Textures for walls aren’t all symmetrical and end up being quite the eyesore. Some of the assets look weirdly almost photo-realistic, such as the road travelling through the middle of the play area, and at the same time, some assets look as if they were thrown together in MS Paint in sixty seconds.

Now I don’t know whether all, some or none of the assets came from the Unity Asset Store or if they were created by DreamSoftGames but the mix’n’matching of the art styles makes the game even more displeasing to play.

The in-game menus are clunky, clearly designed for the drag and drop controls so commonly used on smartphones and tablets. And these controls are tried, tested and great on those devices but not so fun or natural feeling when translated over to PC.

Pushing past the flaws of the design and controls of the game, the mechanics are as you’d expect from a Tycoon style game. You are given a set amount of money at the start of the game, with a basic four wall establishment and tasked to build an empire.

Everything from buying shelves, bathroom amenities, stock, car-parks and employees are yours to buy, place, stock, set prices to and manage. The old spend money to make money motto certainly ascertains in Shopping Tycoon‘s mechanics, but it isn’t anything new or genre-bending.

There is a Cookie Clicker system involved with clicking on question marks above customers heads to increase the chance that they purchase something, I, however, found that the game wasn’t even registering my clicking of these question marks.

At $9.99US for a game that is clearly much more suited to mobile, DreamSoftGames are quite frankly dreaming. Even as a mobile release, I’d expect to not spend a dime for the game, but to simply have to deal with advertisements.

PowerUp! Reviews

Game Title: Shopping Tycoon

  • 2/10
    iPad game on PC - 2/10
  • 4/10
    Sloppy, poor quality - 4/10
  • 3/10
    Ugly - 3/10
Sending
User Review
0 (0 votes)
Steven Hayes
Steven Hayes
If I had to relate myself to any one person, it would be Jodie Highroller aka the Aquaberry Rapper aka Riff Raff..... If Riff Raff was a middle class, mid twenties Australian Bloke who drank VB like it was water. I love art, music and games. Although I am bad at all 3 of them =)

━ more like this

MSI MPG 321URX QD-OLED 4K Gaming monitor Review

OLED gaming monitors are having a moment and this new 32" 4K MSI stands head and shoulders in a competitive market thats full of great options.

Funko Fusion launch set for 13 September 2024

Funko Inc and 10:10 Games have announced that Funko Fusion will launch on 13 September 2024 for PS4, PS5, Switch and Xbox Series X|S....

Asus ROG Falchion RX Low-profile Mechanical Keyboard Review

Asus has once again managed to craft an exceptional keyboard, this time low profile that has excellent performance, battery and appeal.

Stellar Blade Review (PS5) – 2B or not 2B?

Not to put too fine a point on things, but the full version of Stellar Blade presents a way sharper package than the demo...

Logitech G502 X Plus Review

The Logitech G502 X Plus improves on its predecessor with RGB lighting but not much else. Is it really worth the upgrade?