Eric "ConcernedApe" Barone posted a new developer blog this week with a familiar message: Haunted Chocolatier is still in development, still has no release date, and he knows the wait has been long. For fans of cozy life-sim games who have been watching this one since its 2021 reveal, the update is equal parts reassuring and soberin

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Five years in and still grinding
Barone revealed the game in 2021, with development having started a year before that. That puts the project at over five years in the making, and the developer is candid about it. "I know it's taking a long time," he wrote in the blog post. "Feels kinda dumb posting this same thing over and over, but that's the reality."
This is the second update in 2026 carrying that same refrain. Back in January, Barone posted a similar check-in where he also admitted he probably announced the game earlier than he should have. The pattern is clear: progress is happening, but the timeline is genuinely open-ended.
What is actually taking so long
Here's the thing: Barone is not stuck or burned out. He is iterating. The developer explained that systems players will interact with frequently need to meet a high personal standard before he moves on.
"The things in the game which the player will be interacting with or using very often need to be 'perfect,'" Barone wrote, describing his criteria as seamless, clear, intuitive, satisfying, and visually appealing.
One specific example he shared is the recipe book UI, the interface players will use to craft chocolates in the shop. Barone said he has been tuning details like how many clicks each action requires and what information gets displayed. The bar is not just functional clarity, either. "I want more than just comfort. I want to delight the player," he said.
That level of attention to a single UI screen gives a sense of why the broader game is taking as long as it is. Haunted Chocolatier is described as more of an action-RPG compared to Stardew Valley, with combat playing a larger role alongside the business management and relationship-building systems fans of the farming sim will recognize. More moving parts means more to perfect.
Stardew Valley is still pulling attention too
Barone has not been exclusively focused on Haunted Chocolatier. Stardew Valley, which passed its 10th anniversary earlier this year, is still receiving active development. The upcoming 1.7 update, which also has no release date, will add two new marriage candidates alongside other changes. Barone has also floated the idea of a "Stardew Classic" mode and even a true sequel.
Juggling two major projects as a solo developer is a real constraint, and it goes a long way toward explaining the pace. The key here is that neither project appears to be abandoned or deprioritized. Both are just moving at the speed of one person trying to make everything feel right.
Barone closed the post the same way he always does: "As always, I really appreciate your patience."
What this means for the people waiting
For the cozy gaming community that has been following Haunted Chocolatier since that first reveal trailer dropped five years ago, this update does not change the timeline in any concrete way. There is still no release window, no gameplay trailer, and no platform confirmation beyond what was shown in that initial reveal.
What it does confirm is that Barone is still at it, still posting, and still holding the game to a standard that suggests it will be worth the wait when it finally arrives. If you want something to play while the wait continues, the gaming guides hub has plenty of cozy and indie game coverage to keep you occupied. Fans of atmospheric indie titles might also find something worth adding to their wishlist browsing horror games in the meantime. And if you are already deep into another solo-dev gem like The Cabin Factory, there is a full collection of strategy guides to keep that run going strong.








