Little Dragons Café Reviews
Check out Little Dragons Café Review Scores from trusted Critics below. With 14 reviews on CriticDB, Little Dragons Café has a score of:

When all is said and done, Little Dragon’s Cafe is a fun game but doesn’t live up to its pedigree. It’s a charming game to play through though, and well worth your time, but still leaves a little to be desired. The storyline, intentionally left vague here to avoid spoilers, is shallow but cute; and the restaurant management is almost worth the price of admission alone, but the game doesn’t feel totally cohesive.
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It’s safe to say that if you’re currently looking for games that look and play like Harvest Moon, buying a brand new Harvest Moon game is possibly the worst option you could have. The franchise has definitely seen better days, with its latest release, Light of Hope, being the absolute worst game in the history of the franchise. If you’re looking for something that doesn’t look like Harvest Moon, but plays just like it, you need to get Stardew Valley. Now, if you want something that lo...
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There is almost nothing here to recommend. The whole game is simultaneously dull and simplistic; the gathering ill-matched to the amounts required, the minigames lacking any enjoyment, the story development laughably linear and the whole package feeling short of polish. The characters are the only redeeming feature of the game but they are stranded in a joyless game that would be disappointing were it a budget download title. It is therefore unforgivable that Little Dragons Café is a full price release. This café needs to be closed down. The dragon is cute though.
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Booting up Little Dragons Café for the first time, the first thing that strikes is how damn cute the whole thing is. From the adorable twins you choose between to play as to the quaint café itself complete with delightful miniature vegetable patch and impossibly sweet chickens running around, everything is designed to immediately tug at the heartstrings. You’re then thrust into a bizarre, and surprisingly dark, storyline where these young children have to save their half-dragon comatose mother by running her café themselves and raising a dragon that hatches from an egg a strange old wizard brings by.
Read Full ReviewPorting to Nintendo Switch is perfect for Little Dragons Cafe as it reads like a charming children's storybook fit for any age. Although gameplay feels like it's in a loop quite quickly, the characters are memorable and the artwork nothing short of awe-inspiring. The pace of this game may also be very slow for some though I have no doubt parents across the globe would appreciate this pace especially on those extra long road trips. All in all, there is nothing to hate about Little Dragon's Caf...
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Little Dragons Café is the type of game I walk away from feeling more hopeful in the world. Each chapter ends on such an earnest note that it raises my spirits. Sure, it doesn’t have the deepest mechanics, and it’s not the most polished title I’ll play this year. But it has a soul and a kind heart that uplifts the basic gameplay to a place that makes Little Dragons Café an easy recommendation to anyone looking for a soupcon of positivity in their life.
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With a breezy pace and a comically weird story, Little Dragons Cafe is a unique take on farming sims. While I loved cooking meals, establishing my inn, and the anxiety-free pace, its management mechanics have been watered down just a bit too much and result in stakes so low that much of it becomes meaningless. Without making important decisions or a wealth of more interesting side-quests to capture my attention, I eventually ended up bored by the repetitive tasks.
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The creator of Harvest Moon has found a new project in Little Dragons Cafe, an adorable life simulator that will have you exploring high and low while hunting for quality ingredients to please your denizens.
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However, since each story follows the next, your customer satisfaction bar freezes until you resolve the current chapter. The rest of the customers have fairly generic dialogue, with no interaction between them. And since your dragon’s growth–and therefore your exploration–is also gated by story progress, you’ll often find yourself with nothing to do except performing the same repetitive tasks at the café, visiting your favorite gathering spots to replenish your supplies, and waiting for the next story scene. Little Dragons Café is cute and has a good cast of characters, but the segments in between story progression end up unfortunately...
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Little Dragons Cafe falls far behind any other game in the genre by miles. There just isn't enough here to keep people engaged long enough to make it worth the money.
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First of all, it must be said that Little Dragon’s Café is an absolutely gorgeous looking game. It looks like something straight out of the pages of a children’s storybook, with colorful character designs and beautiful, picturesque environments to explore. As well as being utterly delightful to look at, it’s also charming to play. It’s exactly what you’d expect from Yasuhiro Wada, the creator of Harvest Moon. This is a relaxing game all about friendship, adventuring, and of course dragons.
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Even with its technical flaws and progression structure problems, I still can't bring myself to dislike Little Dragons Café. When Little Dragons Café hits its stride mid-game, it is indeed a beautiful, relaxing, and wholesome experience that I would recommend to those looking for a more laid back title to cleanse their palette before this busy fall season. That being said, enough problems did persist to still make it a tad disappointing. Little Dragons Café may be worth waiting on until some technical issues are fixed and the price drops if the incentive of raising a dragon isn't enough for...
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Little Dragon's Café is a causal sim/exploration game which is simply overflowing with charm. It's easy to get drawn in by the game's forgiving gameplay, great music, heartwarming stories, and dramatic day-night changes, and hard to put down, given all there is to do post-game. While its sim mechanics aren't especially deep, LDC provides a delightful way to escape the woes of the real world alongside your own, adorable pet dragon.
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