The 10 Best Management Sims on Itchi.o

Itch.io is truly a place for the weird and offbeat to flourish. No matter what genre you’re into, there’s always an astonishing selection of titles that challenge established convention and reinvent the boundaries of what a game should be. Taking a look at the many management sims on the platform, the range of creativity on display is impressive. From maintaining a chicken farm to preserving the corpse of your dead daughter, there’s a wide variety of experiences to be had here, each enjoyable in their own macabre or meaningful way.
Clichés aside, it’s fun to see what happens when management sims are divorced from some of the well-worn formats and premises comprising the most popular titles. If you’re looking for a more “traditional” management sim, there’s always Autonauts, Factory Town or Odd Realm. But our favorites are the ones that are quirky and thought provoking while still exhibiting that incremental growth that makes the genre so satisfying. Here are the management sims we love.
This adorable management sim explores the simple pleasures of the chicken farming life. In it you can purchase “chooks,” build the various necessities to keep them well fed and happy, and oversee the growth of your farm bit by bit as you make incremental upgrades to maximize its efficiency. It’s not a terribly complicated game, but it’s still an immensely fun one; what started out as a “just a quick test run” session for me quickly turned into an obsession. I spent several hours just hatching birds and improving their environments with little perches and haystacks and other avian amusements. It was one of the most pleasant afternoons I’ve had in a long time.
This one is more of a brief experience rather than the long term play of a typical management sim but nonetheless it’s a good one. Signed by ‘89 is the short story of a band that is trying to get signed to a record label to save their friend Johnny from the perils of a future spent at military school. The goal is to reach 200 fans by writing songs and practicing with bandmates, upgrading equipment and posting fliers until the band’s shows net them enough followers to win the scouting exec’s attention. And as a bonus, there are some sweet little chiptune samples to enjoy from the band’s catalogue.
Treeology, like many Itch.io games on this list and others, is still a work-in-progress, so some features are a little underdeveloped. But what it does with the themes of nurturing and incremental growth inherent to management sims is extremely thought provoking. At the start of the game you are given a globe with several different growing environments to choose a spot to plant a seed, with difficulty determined by the weather and conditions of that region. Once the seed is planted, the water and energy it generates through its roots and branches create Sap, a reserve that can be accumulated and then used to grow more roots and branches, with the roots gathering water and the branches generating energy. Climate effects like luminosity and humidity, as well as parasites, also present hazards to strategize around as the plant is cultivated to full maturation.
A simple but charming management sim, Kahi centers on a small village where only the firebearer, Kahi, may hold the flame that keeps the tribe warm. The objective is to maintain the central bonfire by feeding it wood cut down from nearby trees, while also distributing the fire to the other smaller bonfires in front of each home. It sounds easy, but it is surprisingly challenging; I really had to hustle to keep the fires lit and the villagers unfrozen. If you can keep up, you can warm enough villagers to keep the bonfire roaring—but snowstorms can wipe out your progress quickly. Most management sims are for the long play, but this one will be short. See how long you can last before the fires go out.