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Ye Guild Clerk! is a management simulator where you run an Adventurer’s Guild for anthropomorphic heroes. Released October 28, 2025 on PC, it flips the fantasy RPG formula by putting you behind the counter instead of in the hero’s boots. Your job? Assign quests, gear up foxes and badgers for dungeon crawls, and calculate payouts based on their returns. Developed by a small team with a focus on quirky charm, the game balances light-hearted animal antics with tactical decision-making. It’s ideal for players who enjoy simulators with a twist and appreciate seeing the world through a non-hero’s lens.
You’ll spend most sessions scheduling heroes, adjusting their gear for different quests, and monitoring resource stocks like potions and torches. Each day, animal adventurers apply for work, some want quick coin, others need high-risk rewards. You assign them based on their skills, but you also track how their choices affect guild reputation and town relations. Controls are point-and-click, but depth comes from managing limited resources while juggling multiple quests. A typical session might involve revving a beaver’s armor for a river raid or negotiating a dragon-slayer’s cut. Decisions ripple outward: overpay a hero and funds dwindle; underpay and morale plummets.
PlayPile’s community ratings average 4.3/5, with 72% of players completing the base story. The average playtime is 18 hours, though many return for randomized side quests. Moods are split: 30% call it “refreshingly absurd,” 45% praise its “twitchy pacing,” and 15% critique the early-game tutorial. Critics at Eurogamer and PC Gamer highlight its “delightful animal designs” and “tight loop of reward-disbursement.” The game has 48 achievements, with “Max Guild Rating” being the most skipped (23% fail rate). At $19.99, it’s a mid-tier pick for simulation fans.
Ye Guild Clerk! works best for players who like light strategy with a dash of whimsy. It’s not for those craving deep lore or combat mechanics. The $19.99 price matches its mid-tier content, and the 48 achievements offer replay value for completionists. While the first few hours can feel repetitive, the randomized quests and animal quirks keep it engaging. If you’ve enjoyed Stardew Valley’s backend management or want to see fantasy through a guild clerk’s ledger, this is a solid pick.
Game Modes
Single player
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