Little Corners key art and logo.

Little Corners Review

Game: Little Corners
Genre: Casual, Indie, Simulation
System: Steam (Windows)
Developer | Publisher: Meteor Pixel | SECRET SAUCE, Gamersky Games
Controller Support: Full
Price: US $6.99 | UK £5.99 | EU € 6,99
Release Date: November 13, 2025

Review code provided, with many thanks to Press Engine.

Little Corners is a relaxing, sticker-placement game where you decorate corners of rooms with stickers of all sorts of items. It also has meditative lofi music, plenty of stickers, and even secret, hidden stickers too.

All About Little Corners

I was lucky enough not only to get to review the demo for Little Corners, but also now the full release. And the full release is a whole lot more of what I loved about the demo. So let’s dive into what’s new, what’s not, what I liked, and what I didn’t.

A decorated corner in Little Corners of a ruin is mostly empty.
This is going to be the cutest of all corners.

More corners have been added to the game, including the fantasy ruins, a samurai room, and a pirate corner, among others. The menu is a cute little reminder of what some of the stickers will look like that you can place in your corner. You choose one, then you have a blank slate to begin laying down some stickers. It’s a basic drag-and-drop interaction, and you can rotate the item with right mouse click.

While you are placing stickers in your room, you can change the music, change the background, and unlock hidden stickers. There are three hidden stickers in each room, and each is hidden behind a specific combination of stickers placed in the right way or right order. You only have one little hint to figure it out, but most of the clues are easy to interpret.

The corner selection screen in Little Corners.
Bring this puppy a pillow to sit on!

Overall, almost nothing has changed about the interactions between the demo and the full release. And neither has some of the issues I had with the demo.

The Cons of Little Corner

I really, really would love a way to change the color palettes of things. Even if it were just one or two other choices, it would make a huge difference in being able to get my little rooms to look exactly the way I want them to. There are a plethora of stickers for each level, but it still feels limiting in the way you don’t get to choose anything about it.

There are still only two perspectives for each item, too; when you rotate it, it is either facing left or right. You can’t turn items around so the back is facing you, you can’t shrink or grow items, and you can’t copy stickers to have more chairs around your table, for example.

A decorated corner in Little Corners of a study filled with books.
Two of three hidden stickers; now to get the last one.

There are three hidden stickers you can unlock with each level, but they are limited to that level and are also unchangeable, so the expanded stickers don’t feel like they add a whole lot. Also, there is no undo button that I could find, and it makes me sad when I have a hard time relining up something I didn’t mean to grab and move.

The Pros of Little Corners

Little Corners is incredibly relaxing. The music and sound design are nice, the pictures you can create are beautiful, and the color palettes are soothing. It’s hard not to love this ruin filled to the brim with flowers, or decorating the captain’s quarters on a pirate ship. Little Corners is just a nice, gentle, calming time, and everyone could use a little more of that in their lives.

A hidden sticker has been found, and a pop up is informing you of which was found in Little Corners.
Two more to go!

The addition of the hidden sticker puzzles is an adorable one, and I’m glad it exists. The interface was really well thought out; placing and removing stickers is easy and fast. You can save your progress, or you can start over the same corner and make it different every time you play. It is one of the calmest games I’ve ever played, and I think Little Corners should get high marks just for that.

A decorated corner in Little Corners of a samurai's room.
You can put pets, furniture, clothing, books, and even an altar in the Samurai Room.

The art style is so cute, and all the rooms are unique and beautiful. I loved my time with the Little Corners demo, and I enjoyed my time with the full game even more.

A decorated corner in Little Corners of a ruins filled with plants.
Just perfect!

Conclusion

Little Corners has a few issues, but overall, it’s polished, cute, colorful, relaxing, and a lot of fun. Decorating the rooms is immersive, and you can spend a lot of time making all the stickers just perfect. And all without worrying about your stickers losing their stickiness.

The added hidden stickers, backgrounds, and new levels make it worth your time, especially if you loved the demo. The price point is a little high, but still well within reason. I do hope the developers add more options for the stickers in the future, like recoloring and resizing, but Little Corners is great as it is right now.

Final Verdict: I Like it a Lot. 
I like it a lot

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