Cosmic Buddies Town Reviews

Part of an Animated Educational series for children between 1 to 7 years old – this time, we need to get straight to work helping the Cosmic Buddies build their town! Collect wood, food and other resources to turn a deserted island into your dream adventure land!
App ID747230
App TypeGAME
Developers ,
Publishers Funbox Media Ltd, KISS ltd
Categories Single-player
Genres Strategy, Simulation
Release Date5 Jan, 2018
Platforms Windows
Supported Languages English, German, Spanish - Spain

Cosmic Buddies Town
1 Total Reviews
0 Positive Reviews
1 Negative Reviews
Negative Score

Cosmic Buddies Town has garnered a total of 1 reviews, with 0 positive reviews and 1 negative reviews, resulting in a ‘Negative’ overall score.

Recent Steam Reviews

This section displays the 10 most recent Steam reviews for the game, showcasing a mix of player experiences and sentiments. Each review summary includes the total playtime along with the number of thumbs-up and thumbs-down reactions, clearly indicating the community's feedback

Playtime: 116 minutes
Cosmic Buddies Town is a really, really badly made "town builder" game apparently designed for kids, but this game is so bad if you let kids play it, it could be considered child abuse. The game lacks any tutorial and most of the controls don't work at all, and the ones that do work only barely. Some of the core game functions just don't work... I could build a farmhouse but resource gathering didn't work... it just made no sense. It's unclear why this garbage was ever considered suitable for publication. From a technical perspective, the game doesn't meet basic minimum requirements that most PC gamers expect as standard. There's no option to change the resolution and no useful graphics tweaks. There's no way to ensure this is running at the native resolution of your display. There's no guarantee this game will look right on any PC as a result of this hamfisted design decision. The game features lazy low-polygon "retro" assets, making this look like a barely functional 3D game from the 1990s. It's unclear why the developers weren't able to arrange high quality, high polygon count contemporary assets for the game, and also irrelevant... what matters is that this looks bad as a result of their decisions, a compromise PC gamers shouldn't have to put up with. The game only displays in mobile phone style ultra-pillarboxed aspect ratio. While that's typical for mobile centric developers, in this case it's more likely the developer decided my display was 1920x2160 or something, and so forced the game into that resolution. This is why it's crucial that developers don't make decisions on behalf of gamers about their hardware. A hamfisted, amateur screwup from a lazy developer renders the game display completely unworkable. The controls can't be customised, which will be an annoyance for many, but it can also render the game unplayable for differently-abled gamers, left handed gamers or gamers using AZERTY or other international keyboard layouts. This looks and feels like a mobile app, but it doesn't seem to have made it to the app stores. It's unclear why this was put on Steam instead of the app stores it seems to have been designed for. Maybe it was removed, maybe it was rejected by Apple and Google (they do have more rigorous quality standards than Valve does for Steam, after all). Regardless, for all intents and purposes Cosmic Buddies Town might as well be a mobile app, it has the same limitations and dumbed down qualities. It's impossible to recommend such a game to PC gamers. We don't spend all this money building gaming rigs so we can pretend they're iPhones and play games that might as well be mobile apps. These technical defects push this game below acceptable standards for any modern PC game. The poor quality of this game is reflected by how many people spent time with it. At the time of this review, SteamDB shows the all-time peak player number was only 5 players. This is a remarkably low number, and now, the only player activity occurs once or twice a month, presumably someone loading it up to see what it is then quickly uninstalling it. Considering there's over 120 million gamers on Steam and well over 50,000 games for gamers to choose from, the overwhelming lack of interest in this low quality game is to be expected. Cosmic Buddies Town is relatively cheap at $3 USD, but it's not worth it. Given the defects and quality issues with the game, coupled with the unrealistic price, this is impossible to recommend. This is also competing with over 9,000 free games available on Steam, many of them far better than this paid product.
👍 : 6 | 😃 : 0
Negative
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