Most of it is locked to a certain area, and the repetition of waiting for guests to come and stay, write their reviews, and then move on becomes a little dreary. You can’t reshape buildings or make them bigger, but after progressing, you can’t go back and add bathrooms or other fancy rooms. You’ll build a workbench, use it to craft via blueprints found or given, then put them in your B&Bs. ![]() Resources are everywhere, so it’s not like you’re ever stuck to find what you need, be it wood, metals, or other basic materials. The actual building in Bear and Breakfast is straightforward enough, but you feel limited in how you do so. There’s also a lot of back and forth between quest-givers and completing the menial quests. It takes a while for Bear and Breakfast to pick up, especially as the dialogue is constant, albeit occasionally funny. ![]() Woken by his mother after a bad dream, you’re then tasked with meeting your buddies and setting off on a journey to repair abandoned buildings, finding various resources across the environment, and using them to craft furniture and décor to make quaint little B&Bs in an attempt to bring humans back to where they once abandoned. You play as Hank, a bear who can’t seem to get a good night’s sleep. It’s not a complex process, and the structure of it often feels restrictive, but the art style and charm helps to ease the frustrations. Gummy Cat has released Bear and Breakfast, a cute management sim that sees you take on the role of a bear, clearing up derelict buildings and turning them into viable businesses for humans to return to the world, stay in your bed and breakfasts, and reward you for all your hard work. ![]() Ever wondered what running a B&B as a bear feels like? I’ve lost count of the amount of times the thought has crossed my mind, but now I no longer need to ponder.
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