"I was inspired to make the narrative more heartwarming" said Dokokashira Doko, the lead behind Japanese indie circle Buttercup Garden, describing what pushed Robot Hospice from a bleak science fiction concept into something far more tender. That impulse paid off. Robot Hospice launched for free on Steam on June 10, and players are already feeling it.

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What Robot Hospice actually is
You play as Midori, a new employee at a care facility for elderly robots. Five residents. All terminally ill. All with stories they haven't finished telling yet.
The game is a 2D pixel-styled adventure where conversations are the core mechanic. As you spend time with each robot, you build bonds, learn about their pasts, and eventually discover what final requests they're holding onto. There's one ending, but the choices you make along the way shape how each goodbye lands. That's a deliberate design decision, and it works.
Here's the thing: a game about death that isn't trying to be miserable is genuinely hard to pull off. Robot Hospice threads that needle with care.
The literary inspiration behind the concept
Doko drew from Kazuo Ishiguro's novel Klara and the Sun, a dystopian science fiction story about an artificial being named Klara who sacrifices everything to protect her sickly owner. The novel frames humans and robots as fundamentally at odds. Doko wanted to flip that.
The shift in direction came after hearing Somi, the creator of No Case Should Remain Unsolved, speak at the 2024 Indie Developers Conference. That talk pushed the project toward something warmer, more focused on connection than conflict.
What most players miss is how much that literary foundation shapes the pacing. This isn't a game about robot grief in the abstract. It's about five specific individuals with specific histories, and the weight of that specificity is what makes the pixel art environments feel much larger than they are. Players have noted the game has an ability to "make such a small place feel huge," which is exactly the kind of compliment that sticks.
Free to play, and a browser version is coming
Robot Hospice is available now at no cost for Windows on Steam. A free web browser version is planned for sometime in July, which will open the game up to players who don't want to install anything.
For fans of emotionally driven rpg games and narrative adventures, this sits comfortably alongside some of the most affecting short-form indie games in recent memory. It's not long, but it doesn't need to be.
If you're looking to expand your gaming horizons beyond narrative indies, the gaming guides hub covers everything from action RPGs to strategy titles. And if mech and robot-themed games are your thing, SUPER ROBOT WARS Y is worth keeping on your radar for a very different kind of robot experience.








