
Supermarket Together takes the shop-running fantasy and builds it around cooperation, supporting up to sixteen players at once or a solo run if you prefer to go it alone. The catch is that busier stores draw more demanding customers, so a full house of friends means a livelier, tougher shift. Playing alone lets you crank the difficulty up artificially whenever you are feeling especially industrious.
Progress flows through a skills blackboard fueled by Franchise Points, earned by keeping your supermarket successful. Spending those points unlocks franchises and perks that add real advantages, from making new products available to boosting your employees' performance. There is a clear sense of a business steadily maturing as you invest in it.
Growth also comes through space and infrastructure. Expanding your public floor lets you offer a wider and better range of goods, and a fully upgraded store can hold as many as 49,000 products across its shelves, backed by extra storage and facilities. The everyday running of the place matters too: chores like cleaning keep shoppers happy, while an unwatched aisle invites shoplifters whose thefts drain your finances by day's end, so catching them red-handed pays off. A casual, indie simulation, it gives PC players a shared retail hustle that scales with the size of the crew.