|
Oh, cows. |
Did you know that I used to be a farmer? Like, I actually
farmed things. Seeds went into the ground, time ellapsed, and then mature fruits and vegetables were picked and sold. This process taught me three important things:
- Farming is not a valid career choice for me.
- There is a point at which you cannot be any dirtier or any sweatier.
- Video games make things that are chores seem like fun.
There was a time when
FarmVille was an insanely popular Facebook game. Click to hoe ground. Click to plant seeds. Click to water. Click to harvest and sell. It was a pretty crappy time waster of a game, even for a resource management game, though it probably did teach some basic concepts of profit margins (they game could be even more edu-taining if it had some
Drug Wars-esque supply/demand algorythms). This is not how real farming worked, and whats more, Zynga wasn't the first company to capitalize on the notion of turning farming into a simple point here and do this; it was a Japenese company called Victor Interactive Studio, and localized for the United States by Natsume.
Harvest Moon (or rather, the Harvest Moon series, as there are about a dozen iterations now) was a sprite-based resource management game released for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System in 1997. You control a young man who must repair a desolate farm, plant crops, make money, and woo a local townswoman to then be your wife. Resource management describes games where you must balance a finite set of resources (in this instance, it is mostly time and stamina, although there are some aspects of space and money) in order to acheive your goals. There is no mini-game aspect for planting: just move to where you want the seeds to go and push a button.
Again, I should iterate that this is not how real farming works.
I devoted a great deal of time that I could have actually have been farming to playing this game about farming, which probably says something about me and my generation, but I couldn't help it: the
Harvest Moon formula worked.
|
You're an open book, Rick. |
I've started to play through
Harvest Moon: Friends of Mineral Town - or more specifically, its sequel
More Friends of Mineral Town. The difference between the two is that the latter allows you to play as a female farmer and woo one of the male townsfolk. The game is the same tried and true
Harvest Moon. Gotta clear the weeds and rubble from the farm, hoe the ground, plant the seeds, water the seeds, harvest the crops, feed the chickens, milk the cows, brush my horse... However
More/Friends of Mineral Town is a lot more dating sim than the previous versions.
If you want to try your hand at farming, it'd probably be easier to try the above mentioned
FarmVille, but you miss out on the nostalgia and (lite) interactive fiction of the
Harvest Moon games.
No comments:
Post a Comment