When Sea of Stars launched on PC and consoles in August 2023, it became an instant modern classic. Sabotage Studio's retro-inspired turn-based RPG sold more than six million copies, topped best-of-the-year lists, and was hailed as the rare nostalgic throwback that actually lived up to the SNES-era greats it was cribbing from. Now, on April 7, 2026, it arrived on iOS and Android — and the mobile port, handled by Playdigious, might be the definitive way to play it.
This is a premium port in every sense of the word. There's one up-front price of $9.99 — temporarily dropped to $8.99 for the first week post-launch — and then the game is yours. No ads. No microtransactions. No stamina system. No paywall for content. Just the full Sea of Stars campaign and expansions, optimized for your phone or tablet, with the same save file structure you'd get on any other platform.
Everything That Made The Original Great, In Your Pocket
If you missed Sea of Stars the first time around, a quick refresher. The game follows Valere and Zale, two Solstice Warriors raised from childhood to channel the powers of the sun and the moon. Together, alongside their chef friend Garl, they travel across a sprawling, deeply nostalgic pixel-art world, battling monsters, solving puzzles, cooking meals, and unraveling the central mystery of a recurring cosmic threat. It's Chrono Trigger's combat with Illusion of Gaia's tone, and the soundtrack by Yasunori Mitsuda (Chrono Cross, Xenogears) is one of the best RPG scores of the decade.
The mobile port preserves all of that. The pixel art scales cleanly on both small phone screens and larger tablets. The lighting engine — one of the game's technical highlights — continues to produce those dramatic, time-of-day-sensitive vistas that made the PC version so striking. And the combat, which rewards timing-based taps and well-read enemy animations, translates surprisingly well to touchscreen.
Touch Controls That Actually Work
This is the big question anyone asks about a console RPG on phone: how are the controls? And the answer, impressively, is that they're fine. More than fine, actually. Playdigious has been porting high-profile PC games to mobile for nearly a decade — Dead Cells, Streets of Rage 4, Evoland, the Terraforming Mars port — and they've built a specific UI muscle over that time. Sea of Stars on phone lets you choose between a virtual D-pad or gesture-based movement, both of which feel natural within a few minutes. Combat actions are mapped to large, clearly-labeled buttons in the bottom-right corner, with timed hits registering on the same button press.
There's also extensive MFi and Bluetooth controller support, which will matter a lot to players who already have a Backbone, Razer Kishi, or similar phone-grip controller. On that setup, the game is effectively indistinguishable from the PC or Switch experience, and the much-higher-resolution pixel art actually benefits from being viewed on a modern AMOLED screen.
What's Included — And What Isn't
The full main campaign is here — 30+ hours of story, every boss, every sidequest, every recipe. The original 2023 game is included in its entirety. Playdigious has also rolled in the Dawn of Equinox free update from 2024, which added three-player local co-op (though co-op is PC/console only), a reworked combat mechanic called Mystery Nuts, and the new opening cinematic.
What isn't included, unfortunately, is Throes of the Watchmaker — the free post-game story DLC released on PC and consoles in 2024. Playdigious and Sabotage have both said the Watchmaker DLC is coming to mobile in a future update, free of charge for mobile buyers, but haven't committed to a specific date. If you buy the mobile version today, you're getting the base campaign and the Equinox update, with the Watchmaker content arriving later.
Save Anywhere, Quit Anywhere
The mobile version does add one significant, mobile-specific feature: suspend-to-menu save states. You can quit Sea of Stars at literally any moment — mid-battle, mid-cutscene, mid-puzzle — and resume from the exact frame when you come back. That's a quality-of-life addition that fits mobile play sessions naturally. Three minutes on the bus? Fight one battle. Fifteen minutes in line? Work through the current dungeon. The game respects your time the way a mobile port should.
There's cloud save support through Google Play Games and Apple's iCloud, though there is currently no cross-save with PC or console versions. Your mobile save and your Steam save remain separate. Sabotage has said cross-save is being investigated but is not on the short-term roadmap.
Performance Across Devices
On any iPhone from the iPhone 12 onward or any mid-range Android from the past three years, Sea of Stars runs at a locked 60fps with no visible compromises. On older hardware, the game will scale back certain particle and lighting effects, but the core pixel-art presentation remains intact. Playdigious has listed the minimum iOS requirement as iOS 15, with an iPhone 8 or later, and Android 8.0 or later for Android phones with 3GB of RAM.
File size is a reasonable 2.1GB, which is notable for an RPG of this length. For comparison, Genshin Impact's mobile install weighs close to 30GB. Sea of Stars fits neatly onto older phones and doesn't demand constant content downloads.
Why This Port Matters
Premium mobile ports of beloved indie games have been quietly having a moment. Vampire Survivors, Stardew Valley, Slay the Spire, Balatro, Dead Cells — each of them has proven that there's a real, sustained market for phone games that don't operate on the live-service dopamine economy. Paying ten bucks once for an experience with a start, middle, and end is increasingly attractive to a mobile audience that's been worn down by gacha fatigue and rising microtransaction aggression.
Sea of Stars fits into that lineage perfectly. It's a single-player, story-driven RPG with a clear beginning and ending, designed for people who want to sit down and actually finish a game. That the mobile port is this well-executed — touch controls that work, performance that's locked, presentation that's clean — makes it one of the easiest mobile recommendations of 2026 so far.
For newcomers, this is a great entry point. For players who already finished it on PC or console and want an excuse to play it again on their commute, the suspend-save feature alone may justify a second purchase. And for parents trying to introduce a young player to the kind of turn-based RPG they grew up on — without handing them a $70 console game — Sea of Stars on mobile is about as perfect a fit as the platform gets.
Launch Details
- Developer: Sabotage Studio
- Port by: Playdigious
- Platforms: iOS and Android
- Release: April 7, 2026
- Price: $9.99 USD ($8.99 launch-week discount through April 14)
- Monetization: One-time purchase. No ads. No microtransactions.
- File size: 2.1GB
- Minimum iOS: iOS 15, iPhone 8 or later
- Minimum Android: Android 8.0, 3GB RAM
- Controller support: Full MFi and Bluetooth controller support
