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Youtubers Life 3 is a simulation-strategy hybrid where you build a content-creation empire. Developed by UPLAY Online, it drops you into the chaotic world of 2026 YouTube, where your goal is to dominate the rankings. You manage a virtual home studio, craft viral videos, and compete in real-time with others. The game mixes base-building with timed events, VOD editing, and social media interaction. Released February 5, 2026, it runs on PC and supports solo, co-op, and multiplayer modes. Think of it as a mix of Stardew Valley’s management and Hearthstone’s competitive bite, wrapped in a neon-lit YouTuber’s life.
Your days are spent balancing content creation with resource management. You upgrade your home studio with gear, assign tasks to AI-driven “employees,” and craft videos by selecting scenes, transitions, and effects in real-time. Competitions force you to optimize clips under time pressure, while events like hashtag challenges demand quick pivots. Multiplayer lets you sabotage rivals by buying ad space or hijacking trends. Controls are click-heavy but responsive, with a grid-based interface for building setups. Sessions often hit an hour or two, blending strategic planning with the twitch of timed tasks. The co-op mode pairs players for collaborative content, though solo play remains the most polished.
PlayPile community scores it 8.4/10, with critics at 7.8/10. Average playtime is 35 hours, though 37% finish the main story. Moods are split: 42% find it “Achievement Driven,” 31% call it “Chill,” but 18% are “Frustrated” by grindy monetization. One user wrote, “The editing mechanics are addictive but grind-heavy.” Achievements total 420 points, with 84% completion for most. Critics note the game’s depth is undercut by repetitive event cycles. Positive reviews praise the co-op mode’s creativity, while negative ones cite clunky UI during timed challenges.
Worth it for sim fans who enjoy balancing creativity with strategy. At $29.99, it’s a mid-tier buy, but the 420-achievement cap and 35-hour average suggest replay value. Skip if you hate micromanagement or monetization walls. The co-op mode is a standout, but solo play remains the core. It’s a solid pick for those who want to flex their content-creation chops without the stress of real-world algorithms.
Game Modes
Single player, Multiplayer, Co-operative
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