House Flipper Remastered PS5 Review: Is The Ultimate Collection Worth It?

Stepping into a run-down, beat-up property with nothing but a laptop and a tablet instantly sets a strange, addictive vibe where your only goal is total transformation. Every room presents a fresh disaster of filthy walls, messy floors, and hidden tasks waiting to be checked off one by one. It is a cosy experience where you can completely lose a few hours just chipping away at chores, chilling out as a one-person renovation crew.

QUICK NAV: [Specs] [Gameplay] [Performance] [Settings]

Gert Lush Gaming plays with a pug wearing a hardhat in the garden in House Flipper Remastered Collection.

House Flipper Remastered PlayStation 5 Review

  • Developer: Frozen Way
  • Publisher: Frozen District
  • Storefront Link: PlayStation Store UK
  • Download Size: 12.20GB download size.
  • Trophy Information: No Platinum trophy, but it does have 55 trophies.
  • Included Content: Comes bundled with all the DLC.

House Flipper Remastered PlayStation 5 Review

House restorer gameplay throws you straight into the action with helpful tutorial pop-ups as you play, supported by a dedicated help menu and direct button prompts. You operate directly out of a central home that starts out completely beat up and run down, but you can work out of it perfectly fine since everything is handled cleanly from your laptop and tablet. The jobs you undertake vary wildly across the map, forcing you to jump from location to location fixing appliances, cutting the grass, or cleaning up massive messes. As you take on more work, you get new tools to expand your abilities. Each job offers a brief intro where a voiced character gives some backstory to the location, and once you step inside, you are left with a specific set of tasks and a ticking percentage bar. You do not always need to hit a total one hundred per cent completion mark to finish up a job and leave, but my personal OCD absolutely demands I see those all one hundred per cent across the board before moving on.

The game world is fully 3D, keeping you in a first-person perspective with complete three hundred and sixty-degree camera and movement control. Managing your equipment relies on radial menus to handle tool selection, which is easy enough to learn and serves as the best solution since you build up quite a massive workshop over time. Tasks fill in automatically as you complete them, though the game does not give you any direct guidance on where things are, meaning you need to earn skill points to upgrade your abilities so things like dirt and long grass show up on the mini-map. You earn skill points after performing a shifting amount of actions per level, which lets you increase your task speed or boost the money earned from a gig. When you need materials, the in-game shop is split up into tidy categories and has a fully functioning search bar for buying parts, replacing items, or picking out furnishings for your own houses. Tasks like cleaning windows, laying down stones, or trimming lawns use a free-flowing cursor system, while painting is split into distinct segments with a progress bar. There are even pets to play with, pet, and complete specific jobs for. When you finish a renovation, the game rewards you with before-and-after images saved straight to your library, which you can capture with the PlayStation screenshot tool. Just keep an eye out for saves, as you never really know when it saves, and there is no dedicated save button.

Gert Lush Gaming prepares to clear an overgrown tree with an axe in House Flipper Remastered Collection.

House Flipper Remastered PlayStation 5 Review: Performance & Fidelity

  • Graphics Quality: Great graphics across the different properties and items.
  • Loading Performance: The loading times are not great; there is no clear progression bar or anything, and for what it is, it is bad.
  • Audio Experience: The music is hands down the worst thing in the game; it grates on me, it is highly repetitive, and it is just not fit for long-term play. Bring an audiobook or podcast is my advice.

Settings, Customisation & Control Details

  • General Settings: Options for language, currency, cursor type, in-game messages, tips, and general information.
  • Gameplay Settings: Controls for the mini-map, turning cockroaches into shards of glass, disabling pet needs, hiding buyer comments, hand selection, day and night mode, highlight colour, assemble mode difficulty, and dark mode.
  • Visual Settings: Sliders for brightness, shadow intensity, colour saturation, contrast, and colour temperature.
  • Graphics Settings: Toggles for upscale, upscale quality, sharpness, fps limiter, and a field of view slider.
  • Advanced Settings: Toggles for ambient occlusion, bloom, motion blur, and fog.
  • Controller Settings: Features two distinct layouts, invert axis and sensitivity sliders, slow motion when interacting, and a deadzone slider. You cannot remap the controls.
  • Controls & Menus: Control-wise, it is fine, though it is not amazing and can feel cumbersome at times, but it gets the job done. The menus rely heavily on the cursor system, which is not ideal; I wish you could just press the tool button to pull up the last used item instead of opening the radial menu every single time.
  • Sound Settings: Sliders for master, music, sound effects, ambience, and an option to disable licensed music in intro cutscenes.
Gert Lush Gaming utilizes a bird's eye view to plan interior designs in House Flipper Remastered Collection.

Related Gert Lush Gaming Reviews

House Flipper Remastered PlayStation 5 Review:

Jim Smale

Graphics
70%
Sound
50%
Accessibility
70%
Length
90%
Fun Factor
80%

Summary

What Makes House Flipper Remastered Worth Playing?
This is a prime example of checklist gaming where you can happily make your way down a list and click items off one by one. The inclusion of all the DLC expansions gives you an absolute mountain of stuff to work through right out of the box. It features great graphics that make cleaning up houses feel visually rewarding, and the option to swap out creepy cockroaches for harmless shards of glass is fantastic for peace of mind. Installing appliances and assembling furniture keeps things simple by letting you highlight the parts, hold down the action button, and move your cursor around. When a job wraps up, getting those before and after images saved to your library is incredibly satisfying. It stands out as a game that is just great for chilling out with and losing a few hours to when you want to clear your mind.

The Biggest Frustrations In House Flipper Remastered
The music is hands down the worst thing in the game; it completely grates on me, it is incredibly repetitive, and it is simply not fit for long-term play sessions. The loading times are also not great, leaving you sitting there with no clear progression bar, which feels genuinely bad for this type of experience. Control-wise, it functions fine, but it never feels amazing and can get highly cumbersome, especially since the menus force a clunky cursor system instead of letting you tap a single button to re-equip your last used tool. The job lists and completion percentages can be irritatingly inaccurate or difficult to read at a glance, leaving you thinking you finished everything only to realise you somehow missed three per cent of a room. To make matters worse, entering a room flashes up tasks but fails to explain which specific wall needs painting, and the complete lack of a dedicated save button leaves you guessing when your progress is actually secure.

House Flipper Remastered Overall Verdict: Is It Worth Playing?
House Flipper Remastered delivers a highly addictive, satisfying loop that makes it incredibly easy to switch off your brain and lose an entire afternoon to manual labour. The controls can feel clumsy at times, and the loading screens drag, but the pure satisfaction of checking off chores and tidying up run-down houses shines through. If you can stomach the awful, grating soundtrack and turn it down in the settings, this massive package provides a brilliant way to relax. It is absolutely worth picking up if you love clean, therapeutic checklist gaming.

72%

Jim Smale

Gaming since the Atari 2600, I enjoy the weirdness in games counting Densha De Go and RC De Go as my favourite titles of all time. I prefer gaming of old where buying games from a shop was a thing, Being social in person was a thing. Join me as I attempt to adapt to this new digital age!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.