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15 Relaxing Games To Play for Hundreds of Hours

1-15

No stress, just vibes.

Nazarii Verbitskiy Nazarii Verbitskiy
Gaming - June 11th 2026, 21:00 GMT+2
House Flipper

15. House Flipper

House Flipper turns the most stressful parts of homeownership into oddly satisfying digital therapy. You spend hours painting walls, laying tile, and installing toilets with the kind of methodical precision that somehow never gets boring. The game makes mundane tasks like cleaning up trash and fixing broken windows feel like genuine accomplishments. There's something deeply calming about transforming a disaster of a house into someone's dream home, one careful brush stroke at a time. | © PlayWay
Slay the Spire

14. Slay the Spire

Slay the Spire turns deck-building into something that feels like meditation instead of competition. Every run starts fresh with basic cards, then slowly builds into combinations that either click perfectly or fall apart in interesting ways. The turn-based combat removes all pressure to think fast, letting you study each decision until the perfect play reveals itself. Losing a run never stings because the next one promises entirely different cards and completely new strategies to explore. | © Humble Games
Hades II

13. Hades II

Hades II proves that early access can work when developers actually understand what made the original special. Supergiant took the tight combat and gorgeous art style that defined the first game, then built an entirely new mythology around Melinoë's quest to rescue her family from Chronos. The magic system feels different enough to justify starting over, while the familiar rhythm of death, upgrades, and gorgeous voice acting keeps you coming back for one more run. What looks like more of the same quickly becomes its own obsession. | © Supergiant Games
Subnautica

12. Subnautica

Subnautica sells itself as a survival game about exploring an alien ocean, but it works more like meditation with teeth. The real magic happens in those long stretches where you're just swimming through kelp forests or following fish trails, building bases that feel more like underwater sanctuaries than tactical outposts. Sure, there are leviathans lurking in the deep that will absolutely ruin your day, but most of your time gets spent in that perfect flow state between curiosity and calm. The ocean becomes less scary and more like home the longer you stay down there. | © Unknown Worlds Entertainment
Witcher 3

11. The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt (2015)

The Witcher 3 becomes a completely different animal when you drop the difficulty to easy and treat it like a fantasy vacation simulator. Combat stops being a puzzle to solve and becomes a light formality between gorgeous sunsets, random conversations with merchants, and the genuine pleasure of just riding Roach across those ridiculous vistas. The side quests still hit harder than most games' main stories, but now you can focus on the writing and world-building instead of perfecting your dodge timing. CD Projekt Red accidentally created one of gaming's best slow-burn experiences by making their epic so good that people want to live in it rather than conquer it. | © CD Projekt
Forza horizon 5

10. Forza Horizon 5

Forza Horizon 5 drops you into a massive recreation of Mexico where the only pressure comes from deciding which gorgeous vista to race toward next. The game treats driving like meditation, letting you cruise coastal highways or tear through jungle paths while a festival atmosphere keeps everything light and celebratory. Every car feels different enough to matter, but forgiving enough that you never have to worry about perfect technique. Racing games are not supposed to be this chill, but somehow this one makes speed feel peaceful. | © Microsoft Game Studios
Sea Of Thieves

9. Sea of Thieves

Sea of Thieves asks you to become a pirate, then gives you almost nothing to actually do except sail around and make your own fun. The genius is that this emptiness becomes the entire point. You end up spending hours just fishing with friends, chasing sunsets across beautiful water, or getting into ridiculous adventures that somehow emerge from absolutely nothing. The game works because it trusts players to create their own stories instead of handing them a list of quests to complete. | © Microsoft Studios
Warframe

8. Warframe

Warframe turns the grind into meditation by making every repetitive action feel smooth and purposeful. You spend hundreds of hours farming the same missions, but the movement system is so fluid that sliding through corridors and wall-running across tilesets never gets old. The game respects your time by letting you build everything for free if you are patient, turning what could be frustrating monetization into a slow-burn satisfaction loop. Most live-service games demand your attention; this one just sits there waiting for you to come back whenever you need to turn your brain off and be a space ninja. | © Digital Extremes
Euro Truck Simulator 2

7. Euro Truck Simulator 2

Euro Truck Simulator 2 turns the mundane act of hauling cargo across European highways into something unexpectedly meditative. The game strips away combat, puzzles, and time pressure, leaving only the rhythm of long drives, fuel stops, and careful parking maneuvers that somehow become deeply satisfying. Thousands of players have logged hundreds of hours just listening to in-game radio stations while delivering furniture to Berlin or groceries to Prague. What started as a niche simulation became proof that sometimes the most relaxing games are the ones that let you focus on simple, repetitive tasks. | © SCS Software
Path of Exile

6. Path of Exile

Path of Exile turns the idea of relaxing gameplay completely upside down by burying players in spreadsheets disguised as skill trees. The free-to-play action RPG demands you calculate passive bonuses, plan character builds dozens of hours in advance, and constantly optimize gear combinations that would make an accountant weep. Most games in this genre let you mindlessly click through dungeons, but Path of Exile makes the theorycrafting more addictive than the actual combat. Somehow, that overwhelming complexity becomes deeply meditative once you accept that half your time will be spent in wikis and build planners. | © Grinding Gear Games
The Sims 4

5. The Sims 4

The Sims 4 lets you build houses, create families, and then watch everything spiral into beautiful chaos when your Sim decides to flirt with the mailman instead of going to work. The real addiction comes from the endless customization options and life stories that write themselves through weird AI behavior and random events. You start planning a simple birthday party and somehow end up with three generations of drama, mysterious deaths, and a vampire neighbor. Hours disappear because there is always one more room to build or one more family crisis to resolve. | © EA
Terraria

4. Terraria

Terraria looks like a simple 2D Minecraft clone until you realize it's actually an adventure game disguised as a building sandbox. The real hook comes from digging deeper underground, where each new layer reveals stranger biomes, tougher enemies, and better loot that makes you want to push just a little further down. What starts as chopping trees and building a basic shelter turns into crafting magical weapons, summoning massive bosses, and constructing elaborate fortress networks across multiple worlds. The progression never really stops because there's always another rare material to find or another impossible structure to build. | © Re-Logic
Satisfactory

3. Satisfactory

Satisfactory turns the factory building into a meditative ritual where every conveyor belt placement feels like solving a puzzle. The game drops you on an alien planet with nothing but basic tools and asks you to automate everything, from mining iron ore to manufacturing supercomputers. What starts as hand-crafting a few items slowly transforms into massive industrial complexes that run themselves while you sleep. Watching your perfectly tuned production lines work without you becomes strangely addictive. | © Coffee Stain Studios
No Mans Sky

2. No Man's Sky

No Man's Sky launched as one of gaming's most notorious disappointments, promising infinite exploration that felt surprisingly empty. The years since have transformed it into something much closer to what people originally imagined, with base building, multiplayer, underwater exploration, and actual things to discover across those endless procedurally generated planets. What makes it relaxing now isn't just the meditative rhythm of mining resources and upgrading your ship. It's knowing you can wander in any direction for as long as you want without ever hitting a wall or running out of universe to explore. | © Hello Games
Stardew Valley

1. Stardew Valley

Stardew Valley takes the most stressful parts of real life and makes them feel like a vacation. You inherit a farm, but instead of worrying about crop yields or mortgage payments, you get to plant parsnips, befriend the locals, and fish whenever you want. The whole thing runs on its own gentle rhythm where nothing is ever urgent, and every small task feels satisfying. Four years later, you might still be playing just to see what happens if you finally finish the community center. | © ConcernedApe
1-15

Not every game needs to test your reflexes or break your spirit, and sometimes the best thing to do is sink into something calm and endlessly playable. These 15 are built for the long haul, the kind of low-pressure games you can lose hundreds of hours to without ever feeling like it's work.

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Not every game needs to test your reflexes or break your spirit, and sometimes the best thing to do is sink into something calm and endlessly playable. These 15 are built for the long haul, the kind of low-pressure games you can lose hundreds of hours to without ever feeling like it's work.

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