Casual 3D life sim with bite-sized stories, branching choices, and replayable paths from birth onward
Casual 3D life sim with bite-sized stories, branching choices, and replayable paths from birth onward
Vote (22 votes)
Program license Free
Developer Voodoo
Version 1.5.25
Works under Android
Also known as 100 Years
Vote
(22 votes)
Developer
Voodoo
Works under
Android
Program license
Free
Version
1.5.25
Also known as
100 Years
Pros
- Engaging concept that follows a character from birth to old age
- Quick, bite sized levels suit short play sessions
- Choice based gameplay encourages replay and experimentation
- 3D presentation makes scenarios clear and easy to follow
Cons
- Very frequent ads, often appearing after each level
- Bugs can prevent new levels from loading and block progress
- Some choices feel forced, with only one viable path
- Gem based options are not always impactful, leading to wasted currency
- Female storyline feels more linear and less flexible
100 Years - Life Simulator is a 3D life simulation game where you guide a character from birth to old age, making decisions at key turning points. It suits players who like light, story driven games that can be enjoyed in short bursts.
From baby steps to old age in 3D
At its core, this app offers a full life story broken into quick, interactive scenes. You start as a baby, move through childhood and high school, then into adult life with relationships, work, and everyday dilemmas.
Each short level presents a situation and a couple of clear options, such as how to react when classmates are bullied or whether to skip school or attend every day. The 3D presentation keeps things visually readable and makes each stage feel like a small vignette rather than a long, drawn out chapter.
Choices that shape your path, but not always freely
The main appeal lies in seeing how different decisions affect your lifespan and story. You can replay the character’s life and pick other options to reach new outcomes, try different relationship paths, or change how responsible or reckless your character becomes.
However, the freedom is not complete. Some levels treat choices more like puzzles with only one acceptable answer. Picking the “wrong” option can send you back to restart the level or simply loop until you eventually select the intended path. This design reduces the feeling that you are crafting a unique life and can make the narrative feel more constrained than it first appears.
Replay value through branching stories
The game encourages repeated playthroughs. Since every situation is framed as a crossroads, you are invited to try again and see new scenes when you make different choices. This structure works well as a quick time killer, letting you run through a life, then start over and tweak decisions to chase a different outcome or a longer lifespan.
There is also the option to play as different characters, including a female character. That said, the female route comes across as more linear, with fewer noticeable variations, which may disappoint players hoping for equally flexible stories for every character.
Ads and gem choices hurt the pacing
The experience is heavily interrupted by advertising. Reports of an ad after nearly every level mean your time with the story is frequently broken up, which can turn a relaxing session into something more frustrating.
The game also uses gems for special choices that are presented as more impactful or unique. In practice, some of these paid options do not significantly change the outcome. There are instances where a gem choice keeps you on the same level or leads to an outcome that feels no different from a regular option. Losing gems in these moments can make the currency feel unreliable and undermine trust in the game’s premium decisions.
Technical problems affect progression
Technical stability is another concern. Progress can halt on loading screens, such as getting stuck at “Downloading levels 95%” around year 41 or being unable to load the next level because the progress bar stays at 0%. When this happens, even restarting from the beginning does not always bypass the issue. Bugs like these directly block advancement and can discourage long term play.
Overall impression
100 Years - Life Simulator delivers a simple, often entertaining interactive life story with quick scenes and easy to grasp choices. It works well as a casual distraction and has genuine appeal for players who enjoy branching narratives and replaying to see alternate paths.
At the same time, frequent ads, occasional bugs that stop progression, limited freedom in certain “choices,” and underwhelming gem based options hold it back from being more than an average time waster. With more polish on stability, better balancing of ads, and more consistently meaningful decisions, it could become a stronger recommendation for life sim fans.
Pros
- Engaging concept that follows a character from birth to old age
- Quick, bite sized levels suit short play sessions
- Choice based gameplay encourages replay and experimentation
- 3D presentation makes scenarios clear and easy to follow
Cons
- Very frequent ads, often appearing after each level
- Bugs can prevent new levels from loading and block progress
- Some choices feel forced, with only one viable path
- Gem based options are not always impactful, leading to wasted currency
- Female storyline feels more linear and less flexible