Softonic review

Chronomon: Monster collection meets homestead rebuilding RPG

Chronomon, from Stone Golem Studios, is a role-playing title that places the player in the role of a community builder after societal collapse. You spend sessions catching and training creatures, tending fields, and making narrative choices that shape towns and characters. Key selling points include turn-based encounters, life-sim activities, and cloud-backed cross-save across devices. The game targets fans of retro creature-collection and cozy farming who want a play-anywhere RPG loop.

What kind of game is Chronomon?

So, you arrive in a damaged world and use captured creatures to push reconstruction forward; the setting is explicitly post-apocalyptic and the player's goal ties creature collection to social repair. The title blends monster-taming JRPG structure with homestead routines, drawing direct inspiration from Pokémon and Stardew Valley. Thus, the core tension is both strategic combat and daily obligations, with story branches that respond to the player's choices.

How do exploration, combat, and farming connect?

The game links map exploration to turns in strategic, turn-based combat and to resource loops on the farm. Players can recruit more than 100 distinct monsters, each with unique skills and passive trees, and use them for battles or to assist with chores. Farming supports over 50 crop types, animal care, crafting, and base construction, so progression alternates between tactical encounters and long-form resource management.

What does the game look and sound like?

Chronomon presents a large pixel-art world with dynamic day/night cycles and NPC schedules that create predictable daily rhythms. User feedback on storefronts praises the nostalgic art style, which underpins exploration and town restoration. Audio specifics are not highlighted, but the visual design and predictable NPC routines give the game a deliberate, old-school rhythm that fits both short sessions and longer playthroughs.

Is it hard to get started and how does progression play out?

Progression uses creature evolution, passive skill trees, and branching storylines to unlock new content, so advancement rewards investment over time. Early-access commentary mentions occasional control clunkiness, and the developer designed the title with a watch-first mindset that influences input expectations. New players should expect a learning window to master team builds and farm scheduling rather than instant accessibility.

Chronomon suits collectors who enjoy long-term routines, with one notable caveat

Chronomon is a solid match for players who favor slow-burn progression, daily tasks, and collection-driven goals; its hybrid loop rewards repeated sessions and long-term planning. Console players should note that a native PlayStation 5 release is not officially confirmed, which may affect availability expectations. That distribution uncertainty is the primary practical consideration for those who prefer traditional console launches.

  • Pros

    • Over 100 collectible monsters with unique skills and passive trees
    • Farming includes 50+ crop types and animal husbandry
    • Cloud saves enable cross-device progression, including Wear OS and PC
    • Pixel-art world with dynamic day/night cycles and NPC schedules
  • Cons

    • Native PlayStation 5 release is not officially confirmed
    • Early-access feedback notes occasional control clunkiness
    • Watch-first design may produce unconventional controller mappings
 0/1

App specs

Also available in other platforms

Program available in other languages



User reviews about Chronomon

Have you tried Chronomon? Be the first to leave your opinion!

Add review

Latest articles

Laws concerning the use of this software vary from country to country. We do not encourage or condone the use of this program if it is in violation of these laws.