Design Family Life
Supersonic Studios LTD
Screenshots



About this app
Design Family Life drops you into the messy, sweet chaos of making a family and a home. Pick partners, have kids, pick jobs, and fling paint on walls until the house feels like yours. I spent an embarrassingly long time sizing a couch (don’t judge me) and then watched the toddler trash it five minutes later. There are wardrobe choices, hairstyles, and tiny daily needs to juggle—feed, entertain, nap (yes, naps matter). Choices change outcomes; relationships shift; the paycheck sometimes doesn’t cover the mood swings (real life, huh?). It’s casual, breezy, and full of small surprises. Not a hard-core simulator—so don’t expect math-heavy stats—just a slice-of-life toybox where your decisions cause drama, smiles, and the occasional eye-roll. Play a while. Then call in sick (you know you will).
Editor's Review
Alright—full disclosure: I downloaded this on a whim and then blinked and it was morning. Design Family Life is not trying to be a spreadsheet of life; it’s a goofy, affectionate sandbox about people and rooms. The UI is straightforward enough that I stopped cursing at menus by minute two (progress!). Character customization is delightfully silly—hair, outfits, and accessories that made me giggle and then get strangely invested in a pixelated toddler’s bad hair day. Gameplay loops are simple: work, care, build, repeat—with events that force real choices (and real consequences). I got stuck on a parenting event that made me rage—two hours of trial and error, hand-controller sweat and all—then I cackled when it finally went my way. The art has charm, the soundtrack is mellow, and the progression rewards creativity. Not everything’s perfect (some dialogs feel repetitive and ad pacing can be annoying), but if you want a cozy, occasionally chaotic time-sink where you call the shots and laugh at your own poor decorating choices—this one’s worth the download.
Pros
- Easy, approachable gameplay that hooks quickly (no manual required).
- Robust home customization—tiny details actually change how rooms feel.
- Character options let you craft goofy or serious family stories.
- Events force real choices that lead to surprising outcomes.
Cons
- Some dialogue lines repeat too often—gets old after long sessions.
- Progression can bog down without micro-upgrades (you’ll notice).
- Ad frequency can interrupt the flow at awkward times.
- Occasional bugs in event triggers (I had to restart once).
Additional Information
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