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Simulation Games for Desktop / Mouse

Manage, build, and experiment with systems — no lose condition required. Verified for Mouse + keyboard.

By Bramwell Faucher|Published 1 September 2024|Last reviewed 1 November 2025

About This Combination

Simulation games in the browser range from the reassuringly gentle (Hay Day–style farm management) to the perversely complex (OpenTTD in a browser tab). The genre's strength is that it tolerates interruption: you can close the tab, come back, and the system has simply evolved. The weakness is that most browser sims either monetise aggressively or are Flash-era relics that no longer run. The ones that survived to 2025 on HTML5 tend to be the ones built by people who actually liked the genre.

Device Notes for Desktop / Mouse

Desktop-mouse is still the best environment for complex browser games — two analogue axes via mouse, dozens of keys, consistent latency, and a screen large enough to show context. The games that genuinely require this setup are strategy, deckbuilders, and anything with precision pointing. Most other genres work fine here but don't require it. Bramwell's test-rig desktop is a Dell XPS 15 running Chrome 124 as the baseline; results on Safari/Firefox are noted separately when they diverge.

Compatibility

Chrome 110+ recommended. Safari 17+ has improved WebGL support significantly.

Screen Notes

1280px minimum recommended. Most browser games assume 1024px wide viewport.


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Other Devices for Simulation

Mobile / TouchController-FriendlyKeyboard-OnlyOne-Handed Play