AnAMD Phenom II X4 955 CPU is required at a minimum to run House Flipper. However, the developers recommend a CPU greater or equal to an Intel Core i5-8400 to play the game. In terms of House Flipper file size, you will need at least 6GB available. The recommended requirements from the developers suggest you have 6GB space in order to install the game. The cheapest graphics card you can play it on is an NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560. But, according to the developers the recommended graphics card is an NVIDIA GeForce GTX 970. The minimum memory requirement for House Flipper is 4GB installed in your computer. Additionally, the game developers recommend somewhere around 8GB in your system.
Looking for an upgrade? Try our easy to use House Flipper set up guides to find the best cards. Filter for House Flipper graphics card comparison and CPU compare. We'll help you find the best deal for the right gear to run the game.
How many FPS will I get on House Flipper? We reference thousands of reports from PCGameBenchmark users running our FPS tracking app to tell you exactly how House Flipper performs across a range of different settings and resolutions on the most popular PC gaming setups.
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Download our free FPS Monitor via Overwolf to count your frame rates as you play, and test how tweaks to your settings can boost FPS and increase House Flipper performance. Our app is compatible with hundreds of the best PC games and available now.
Anyway, as my obsession with Stardew Valley proved, my disdain for a real-life activity doesn't preclude me from mindlessly performing the same act in a video game for hours on end. That's why I was both excited and scared when I received a press release for House Flipper, a game about cleaning up and repairing homes for profit. Could this finally be a gateway into my wife's weird obsession with watching other people do housework? Could it reverse my bias against home improvement that Tim Allen instilled in me so many years ago? Would I leave the game with the knowledge necessary to transform our real-life home into our own personal palace? There was only one way to find out!
Even I have enough real-world experience to know that's totally not how you mop, but it gets the job done, so whatever! After swabbing everything that looks dirty, I gain enough experience to upgrade my cleaning skills! This game is already better than real life!
Yeah...that definitely isn't right. Regardless, I push ahead, throwing away all the old boxes and cans and tidying up as best I can. However, my attempts to create a respectable living space are stymied by a chainsaw (?!) that's sitting in the corner, which I can't get rid of. After trying to hide it in a few spaces I decide to embrace it instead and make it a focal point of the room.
Replacing the stolen appliance is as easy as opening up my handy tablet and ordering a new one, then screwing it into place via a few simple prompts. I also unlock a new squeegee ability, and clean the woman's windows so that she can longingly stare out at her less pathetic neighbors when she gets home.
My next job comes from a soon-to-be father, begging me to not only clean his entire house, but also whip up a nursery, because he and his wife "have no spare time to clean and renovate the house." Sounds like they're going to be great parents! Maybe I can just raise their damn baby for them while I'm at it! I take the job anyway, but regret it as soon as I open the front door...
This is way worse than I thought! These people aren't qualified to be parents! Can you preemptively call child protection services before a baby is even born? Either way, I figure it's my duty to chronicle their disgusting, child-endangering environment for the inevitable custody trial, so I once again tromp through the entire house taking pictures.
And finally, here's the nursery. I'm sure that black mold on the walls is going to be real good for developing baby lungs! Clearly, the best option would be to just burn the whole damn house down and collect the insurance money, but since that's not an option, I get to work.
This job introduces a new painting mechanic, which requires you to first buy a bucket of paint, then dip your roller in it before you start laying down strips on the walls. It's not as fun as the free-form squeegee mechanic, but it is more efficient than my real-life, paint-wherever-the-roller-guides-you technique. Anyway, the couple chose pastel pink for the nursery walls, because not only are they slobs, they're also slaves to gender stereotypes. Way to go, monsters!
There, this is way more open! You can really feel the breeze flow through the entire house now! Antony's neighbors are going to be SO jealous. At first I was upset that I couldn't get rid of the floating doorways, but they've kind of grown on me.
Unfortunately, the game wouldn't let me go through with my latest scheme. Dammit, House Flipper! How dare you impose your own moral code on my house-flipping fantasies! That said, while I may not be the kind of guy who would sell all of Antony's furniture...
...I am the kind of guy who would jam it all into his kitchen for no damn reason. Granted, there's not a lot of room to maneuver around the stove, but you could run a relay race through the rest of the house!
Come into your new cellar, Antony, and taste a fine vintage! However, every wall I built decreased my first objective for breaking down walls, trapping me in a deranged catch-22. Obviously this calls for thinking outside the box...
There we go! Clowns make everything better! Somehow I managed to meet the bare minimum requirement to complete the project, which meant Antony was going to pay me after all. Suddenly I felt a pang of remorse for moving all his furniture into the kitchen like a jerk. I decided to once again spend my own money on another a custom installation: a giant, blood-red wall right inside his front door with more one-of-a-kind art.
Frozen District has released fresh information about House Flipper 2. It will enable us not only to renovate existing houses, but also to build new ones. In addition, a new gameplay trailer and system requirements have been released.
Announced in February 2022, House Flipper 2, of which we knew so far only that this sequel to the builder-investor simulator from 2018 , will make it possible not only to renovate existing houses, but also to build new ones. Today, studio Frozen District confirmed this information, while providing some fresh reports.
House Flipper is a game about buying houses to renovate them and sell for profit. It plays kinda like Build Mode in The Sims, except that you play the game in first person. You walk into the house, whip out the paint roller, and get painting. Or whip out the sledgehammer and knock out a wall bit by bit.
House Flipper received "mixed or average reviews" according to review aggregator Metacritic, with multiple reviewers commenting that fixing up the homes is satisfying while questioning its long-term playability. [...] PC Gamer was critical, stating that "There's a definite satisfaction in taking a gross room and making it look nice, and it's pretty cool that you can knock down (and rebuild) walls, but I just don't find the act of slowly and mechanically painting and cleaning much fun, especially with the knowledge that my actual house could do with a bit of that." It became a bestseller on Steam.
On the topic of: why play this game when you could take care of your own house... Well, there's a game for all phases of life. If you're neck deep in your own house renovation, we can see that this is not the game to play right now. But if you're like us... we rent, but we've already fixed our apartment maximally. We only have two rooms and a bathroom, and we can't possibly get all of our desire to do interior design out of our system in only two rooms. We've made our kitchen yellow... we can't also have a pink kitchen without giving up our yellow kitchen, and we're not ready to switch it yet. We also have to work within the limitations of the cabinets being in a certain (bad) configuration and the walls being a certain (plain) color, and we can't just go with a sledgehammer and change the layout.
And it really is so satisfying. Especially if you're starting with a horrible grungy house, and you clean it all up, and apply the fresh coat of paint. Never have we sighed with satisfaction more when playing a video game.
The game does offer goals to meet within each scenario, but the overarching approach of what you're doing is up to you. You could strive to fix a house with minimal changes, reusing the pre-existing furniture and not altering the layout. You could play to see what is the minimal amount of money you can put into the house to try to maximize the profits with minimal effort. Or you could just completely gut the house and redo everything, even the plumbing, and then sell your completely renovated house. Or decide that you live there now, and keep it as your "office". You can decide yourself.
Although the name of the game is House Flipper, flipping houses is just one game mode. There is also an entire mode where you play as an independent contractor. You receive emails from your clients explaining what they want, and they hire you to do odd jobs around their houses.
We did this part first, because we mistook it for a tutorial. We weren't completely wrong, because these odd jobs do introduce the various game mechanics gradually - we didn't want to just be plunged into a complete renovation job. But there's no requirement to do all of these first. This game is non-linear like that.
During these jobs, we will be given a checklist of what we're supposed to do. But, like a real contractor, you can just leave when the job is not even fully done. In some ways, this is a good gameplay mechanic, because sometimes the interface says the room is 99% clean, and for the life of us we cannot find the last bit of filth that needs to be cleaned. But it also means that you can just paint some of the wall, and then just leave, and still expect to be paid. Realism!
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