Sweet Home: Look and Find Collector’s Edition Lands on Xbox Store

Microsoft has published an Xbox Store listing for Sweet Home: Look and Find Collector’s Edition, bringing the low-key hidden-object puzzler to the Xbox storefront. The page appeared on July 15 and describes a single-player game built around searching furnished homes, gardens, pool areas and other domestic scenes for objects, then completing puzzles and mini-games.
The listing is currently surfaced through Microsoft’s Norwegian storefront and uses a localized “Buy” page, but it does not spell out a wider release schedule, supported Xbox console models, price, or Game Pass availability. That makes this look like a standard digital-store release rather than a subscription addition or a major Xbox launch.

Cozy living room opens onto a lush pool garden, filled with plants, pets, toys, and whimsical details.A familiar budget-game format​

According to Microsoft’s store description, the game leans into casual, relaxing hidden-object play rather than narrative adventure or action. Players search through home and outdoor environments, with the presentation emphasizing cozy locations, increased visual detail, and compact puzzle activities between searches.
The Collector’s Edition adds eight extra locations, eight additional mini-games, and apartments containing different interior items. Microsoft’s description does not identify whether those apartments are separate scenes, customization spaces, or part of the main search progression.
The title is not new to PC. Steam lists Sweet Home: Look and Find Collector’s Edition as a December 2023 release from developer and publisher Avi Games, with Windows 7 through Windows 11 listed among its supported operating systems. The PC version also includes achievements and cloud saves through Steam. Nintendo later published a Switch version in February 2025 through Ocean Media.

What Xbox players should expect​

This is a niche release aimed at fans of classic “find the object in a busy scene” games, with simple puzzle and mini-game breaks rather than a conventional campaign. The storefront copy makes no mention of multiplayer, Xbox Play Anywhere support, mouse-and-keyboard controls, cross-save, achievements, or Series X|S-specific enhancements.
That lack of technical detail matters more than the game’s modest scope. Windows users who already own the Steam edition should not assume that an Xbox purchase carries over, and Xbox players should not assume PC access is included. Microsoft has not indicated that the Xbox edition participates in Play Anywhere, which would normally be explicitly labeled on the store page.
For administrators and family-device managers, the game appears to be a conventional consumer digital purchase with no enterprise relevance or service dependency beyond the Xbox account and store ecosystem. Its content is centered on household scenes, object searches, puzzles and mini-games, rather than online interaction.
Prospective buyers should check their local Xbox Store listing for price, console compatibility and account-entitlement details before purchasing.

References​

  1. Primary source: Microsoft
    Published: Wed, 15 Jul 2026 01:01:21 GMT
  2. Related coverage: nintendo.com
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  5. Related coverage: gamepasscompare.com
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