Planet Maker

Planet Maker for PC

CasualPATRIOTGAMES

Now, let’s make your own planet!

Rating
2.5 ★
Installs
100000
Content
Everyone
Category
Casual

What's New

Version 3.1
Size 33.2 MB
fix network error
Planet Maker for PC

If you've tried Planet Maker on a phone, you know the controls can feel cramped and the tiny text makes navigation difficult. Running Planet Maker on PC gives you a bigger screen, a real keyboard and mouse for more precise planet shaping, and the ability to play longer without mobile fatigue. This casual planet-creation game lets you sculpt 3D worlds by touching and stretching terrain, adding atmospheres and moons to match your vision, then browse creations in a shared gallery.

Planet Maker is a sandbox where you build planets from scratch. The core loop involves manipulating terrain—stretching surfaces outward to expand landmasses and pressing inward to carve mountains and ocean basins—then layering on atmospheric effects and orbital bodies. On a PC, this planet-making process benefits from mouse precision and a larger viewport, letting you see your work in fuller detail and refine shapes without the occlusion and lag that phones sometimes struggle with.

Planet Shaping and Customization

The main appeal of Planet Maker is hands-on terrain editing. You can deform the planet surface to create varied geography, then add atmospheric layers and satellites. However, customization options are limited—many textures and planetary features require purchase, and players have reported that control over specific attributes like cloud density, planetary mass, and surface texture is restricted. The game does not offer tools to add vegetation or unlock all planetary variants without spending money.

Performance and Visual Design

Planet Maker shows its casual roots in visual presentation. Graphics use simple, low-polygon models rather than high-fidelity rendering. On PC, the larger display can make these simpler assets feel less cramped, and a keyboard-and-mouse setup may reduce the performance stutter some players experience on mobile. Responsiveness during terrain sculpting varies, with some users noting lag during intensive building sessions.

Gallery and Replayability

After you craft your planet, you can save images and browse user-created planets in the community gallery. The game is strongest during the creation phase; once a planet is finished, the sandbox offers little else to explore—no simulation, no evolution, and no ongoing interaction with completed worlds. This limits long-term engagement beyond the act of building itself.

Text and Interface Scale

One challenge that improves on PC: the original mobile interface uses tiny text and menu buttons scaled for phones, and some functions reference controls like the "tab" key that don't exist on touch screens. When you play Planet Maker for PC Windows, you get a proper display that reads legibly and input methods that match desktop conventions, making the interface far more usable than on a phone's small screen.

Planet Maker on Windows

Download Planet Maker

How to Install Planet Maker for PC

  1. Download BlueStacks. Go to bluestacks.com and download the installer. BlueStacks 5 runs on Windows 7 or later; Mac users get BlueStacks Air.
  2. Install and launch. Run the installer and follow the prompts. Initial setup takes a few minutes as the Android environment initializes.
  3. Sign in to Google Play. Open the Play Store from the BlueStacks home screen and sign in with a Google account.
  4. Install Planet Maker. Search for Planet Maker in the Play Store, click Install, then launch Planet Maker from the BlueStacks home screen.

FAQ

Is Planet Maker free?

The app is free to download, but many textures, planet types, and cosmetic features require in-app purchase. You can create a basic planet without spending, but customization depth requires payment.

Can I add grass and different planetary features?

The game does not include tools to add grass or vegetation. Many surface textures and planetary variants are locked behind paywalls or unavailable regardless of payment.

What do I do after I finish building a planet?

Once your planet is complete, you can save an image and view it in the gallery. The game does not simulate planetary evolution or progression after creation, so replayability depends on building new planets from scratch.

Why should I run Planet Maker on PC instead of my phone?

A bigger screen makes terrain sculpting easier, mouse controls offer finer precision than touch, and text and menu buttons are legible without zoom. The interface was originally designed for desktop, so PC play restores proper keyboard controls and usable button sizes.

Does Planet Maker have performance issues?

Users report occasional lag during planet creation and deformation, particularly on lower-end hardware. PC performance depends on your system specifications, though a dedicated machine often handles the simple graphics more smoothly than mobile devices.