Princess Farmer is free on the Epic Games Store right now, and if you have even a passing interest in puzzle games, it's worth the two minutes it takes to claim it.
The game comes from Samobee Games and Whitethorn Games, and it originally launched as a premium title on mobile and PC. That premium origin matters more than you might expect.

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What you're actually getting for free
The premise is wonderfully unserious. You play as an anthropomorphic bunny who gets crowned royalty after digging up a tube of lipstick. From that absurd starting point, Princess Farmer commits fully to its silly tone, leaning into pixel art charm and dialogue written in DoggoLingo, the kind of internet-speak where birds are described as "floofy" and everything is aggressively wholesome.
That aesthetic will absolutely divide people. If you have zero patience for that flavor of cuteness, this one probably isn't for you. But if it lands, there's a genuine warmth to the writing that makes the story move at a pleasant clip.
The match-3 mechanics have a small but meaningful twist. Instead of swiping tiles sideways, you move your character left and right across the grid, pulling vegetables out of the soil or pushing them back down to create matches. The core loop still delivers those satisfying combo chains, with pink blobs cascading across the screen when things click into place. The delivery just feels different enough to stop it blending into the pile of identical match-3 games.
No ads, no energy bars, no nonsense
Here's the thing that actually sets Princess Farmer apart from most mobile puzzle games you've played: it was built as a premium product. That means no unskippable ads, no energy systems forcing you to wait 30 minutes between sessions, and no pop-ups offering you 500 coins for $2.99. You beat a stage, you move to the next one. That's it.
For anyone who has grown numb to the free-to-play puzzle format, this is a genuine breath of fresh air.
The level design supports that pacing well. Rather than recycling the same score-chasing objective across every stage, the game rotates its goals. Some levels ask for a specific number of matches, others demand horizontal or vertical combos specifically. It keeps each stage feeling like its own small problem to solve rather than a grind toward an arbitrary number.
The one thing that actually bothers me
The controls have a friction problem. Moving left and right across the grid feels slightly sluggish, and navigating the overworld map requires skipping past several inactive nodes to reach the next playable stage. Neither issue breaks the experience, but both are noticeable enough to interrupt the otherwise smooth flow.
For a game this light on mechanical complexity, control responsiveness matters more than usual. It's the kind of thing a patch could fix in an afternoon, and hopefully Samobee Games revisits it.
Grab it before the window closes
Epic's free game rotation moves weekly, so Princess Farmer won't stay free indefinitely. It's a short game, the kind you finish over a weekend without feeling like you've committed to anything, and the zero-dollar price tag removes every reason to hesitate.
If you want more to play alongside it, the gaming guides hub on our site has strategy content across a wide range of genres to keep you busy between sessions.








