The cozy games launching in April are almost unanimously chilled out. It’s really feeling like groundhog day around here because somehow the extra six weeks of winter aren’t over. I’ve dragged PC Gamer’s cozy gaming collective out of their burrows to curate the cozy games of April calendar and tell you a little about what they’re planning to play. Spoiler alert: no farm/life sims to be found. So just shhhh put your cable knit sweater back on and play a game with no fail state, little critters.
April cozy game forecast: ❄️ Chill warning
There’s nary a farm sim in sight this month! The cozy game calendar for April feels like it really expects you to stay tucked under the blankets for one more month of rot time before the spring rush begins. We’ve got multiple hidden object games, multiple diorama builders, and emotional adventure games. The cozy games of this month are going to really let us play at our own pace—no rushing to get in bed or do chores before 2am, not this time!
April cozy games calendar
Our cozy game picks for April

Hello Kitty Island Adventure: City Town

Castle Idler

Andrea Shearon
At first I didn’t get it. How on earth am I supposed to do tower defense if the tower I’m defending has no health bar? But it’s quite literally in the name, Castle Idler. There are no waves, the enemies just go round and round in the same loop until you find the right defense combination to take them all out in one successful killstreak. If you don’t have the resources to sustain a win, just let it idle!
It took me a few rounds to find my groove with the demo, but when it clicked? Brilliant. I was in the zone balancing perk upgrades and planning the perfect hands-off defenses. It’s a nice change of pace from all the farming and pet idle games I’ve been playing, so Castle Idler is probably my next second screen distraction when it launches later this month.

ShantyTown

Jess Kinghorn
I loved the dark cozy vibes of cyberpunk city builder Dystopika, but found myself longing for just a bit more structure when creating my cluttered skylines. Shanty Town takes a level-based approach, and offers an almost Tetris-like quality to gameplay as you try to cram a defined list of props into a tiny amount of space. Judging by the airships and the strange marshland creature I spied in one level, Shanty Town lays its scene somewhere decidedly outside of our world. Your mileage may vary as to whether that gives it license to side step discussion of the economic conditions that give rise to shanty towns in real life, but the very generous demo gives you plenty of time to ponder that question.

Outbound

Lauren Morton
It’s been a while since my core crafting games group chat has had a reason to get the band back together and maybe Outbound is finally the one. Building an off-the-grid base on top of our cute little camper van is just enough of a fun new premise to entice my friends, I think. Outbound’s bright colors and renewable energy sources look like a nice cozy twist on crafting sims. Only question is: Who’s driving? This passenger princess is ready to blow a bit of steam off the old finger gun barrels by tackling a new build system.
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