My Little Farmies
Overall the game is very enjoyable and can keep you very busy tending to your farm, harvesting/growing crops, upgrading buildings and producing items in the various production buildings.
Once you get to level 25-30 be warned that you will be forced to spend 200 gold bars to further expand your farm to make room for more buildings, pens ect, and i can only imagine that you will have to spend 300-400 for the next and so on, so make sure you buy as many expansions using your Thalers as you can before you get stuck at this point.
– Real player with 7506.7 hrs in game
Read More: Best Agriculture City Builder Games.
I have only played for a little while, but am enjoying this game a lot. The graphics are nicely done, and the tutorial is very helpful. As I mentioned in a comment I made in one of the negative reviews, this is not a game for impatient players. You will have to wait for things to grow and to be build. I have played quite a few F2P games, and never used real money to get quicker through the game. I only ever bought starter kits and special items that you can’t find in the game otherwise.
The one thing I don’t care for in this game is that the developers, who are German, set the dates the American way, giving first the month and then the day. Very confusing for me. In Germany - as in other European countries - the date is displayed as giving first the day and then the month.
– Real player with 1469.3 hrs in game
My Free Farm
Simply it’s A Pay to Win Game.
– Real player with 242.5 hrs in game
Read More: Best Agriculture Building Games.
Dont bother! Its a pay to win. Everything useful costs good money to buy or get this to even use. At level ten they take away tons of things that make this game cool then you have to buy a “premium” account. You have hundreds of plots and animals to feed one at a time after that more then one per animal too. The in game player market dont move at all and you pay to put something up for someone else to buy only for seconds later someone else putting a stack of 50,000 one cent cheaper then you and bam you now wasted your money(which isnt easy to come by). I have been playing for a month now and have a thousands bucks to spare right now. The only income other then the players market is customers which you get a few a WHOLE day. You can pay to get more like 1000 in game money to get a huge 2 more a day which is only gonna get you to about 200 per customer. Also with real money you have a few more options for more customers. This game has balance issues. It also has things you are to get for reaching a higher level well it says you get but never do. I see some of these later game things costs thousands and thousands of crops. Just think about the endless single harvest and watering clicking. The in game help could use some help too. There is things in the game it dont explain and trying to get a answer on the forums or discord is met with spams of “I need friends”. Yes friends which I cant see for what purpose in this browser game.
– Real player with 73.9 hrs in game
My Free Farm 2
I’ve been playing this game for more than 2 months now. Although I enjoy it, and plan to keep playing, I need to point out that there are more cons than pros to the game.
Pros[olist]
- Animated animals: The animation and AI is spot on. I’ve spent quite a bit of time just watching the baby deer frolic.* Graphics: All the graphics are adorable. Sometimes I do wish I could turn off the weather. To the devs: yes, I noticed how the sun moves in the sky… very funny how it just goes round and round. If you want night, you need to build the Lighthouse.
– Real player with 3325.1 hrs in game
Read More: Best Agriculture Building Games.
Free to play farm builder…. SLOW pace, Typical Gem purchase/use to SPEED thing up. Of cource you can always wait, Harvest, fulfil order - get gold, spend on upgrading your farm. Decorations Drop NEEDED building items - screw,hammer etc to upgraded and expand farm. (limits on ### of tiles as well as each type.) Bigest problem so far TIME - seems LONGER than others of this type (need to decrease time 25-50%). Also anoying is having harvest limit on Trees, if kept , at least they should NOT cost needed expansion items (see decorations above ) too remove the Dead tree- which can not be moved once depleted. Lumberjack hut does not help this at all and is difiuclt to aquire without buying tools and spending RWmoney to get dimonds. Diamonds are nearly imposible to aquire, 1/level and 1 lumberjack hut quest and 1 other (only once) in 30 levels. All in all BIG TIME waste . Cost progressivly increases,as well as the time it takes to get tools from decorations. Changed from thumbs up to down. and uninstalled.
– Real player with 412.2 hrs in game
Viridi
Disclaimer: I beta tested this game.
Viridi is exactly what it says on the tin: it’s a little virtual garden where you watch your plants grow.
The gameplay itself is minimalistic. Apart from planting your succulents, watering them, and zooming in to sing at them, there’s very little else you can do. It’s supposed to be a very zen experience — similar to keeping actual plants — so if you expect more interactivity than that then this is not the game for you. I usually had it on in the background while I went on with my day as always (hence my exorbitant playtime), but you don’t need to leave it on all the time. Your plants will grow just fine while the game is closed as well, so if you only want to spend 5 minutes a day checking up on your plants, then you can do that too. As you can see the joy of the game doesn’t lie within its interactivity, but rather within owning a virtual garden in itself.
– Real player with 302.4 hrs in game
Inch by inch… Calmly
snail crawls around the pot. Zen.
Watching grass grow.
…………
In real life I’ve killed more plants than I can (or would bother) count. In Viridi I can feel like an expert gardener, and without a stress of real gardening. Au contraire - it is an awesome stress reliever (and believe me - I know about stress!).
This game requires a really low level of skills, there’s no steep learning curve, you don’t have to spend hours trying to beat something or find some other-thing or figure out some puzzle. You just open the game once a day (or even not every day, or maybe 2-3 times a day - up to your liking), water your plants and pluck weeds. Once a week you get a free seed that you can add to your existing pot, or keep it for the future, or trade with other players.
– Real player with 204.0 hrs in game
Farmageddon: A Cattle Royale
i hate that i laughed at THAT many cow puns lmao
the intro killed me and the creative idea to use cows as a battle royale main character is p neat
how is this game free?!
– Real player with 6.7 hrs in game
OKAY, the replay value of this game is pretty outstanding! Honestly, there isn’t much out there in terms of DAILY gameplay changes, and I am in love with the “king of the hill” sort of way you are able to CLAIM the Divine pasture and show off your build to friends as they try to take you down!
Honestly, I can see a negative review with only 8 minutes of playtime. They certainly didn’t give the game a shot or comprehend the games core mechanic, challenging friends! Too play this game for 8 minutes then write a 4 paragraph review is just unethical and wrong.
– Real player with 3.2 hrs in game
Croppy Boy
It’s fun little game to mess around with.
The controls are a bit weird and will need awhile to get used to.
Controls :
included W A S D and Z (for tackle people, they’ll drop stuff on impact but.. it costs you stamina, will talk about this more later.)
-
A for dropping stuff you have (will drop crops first, then seeds)
-
S for tool actions (for watering crops, plow dirt, and seeding)
//it depends on your selected tool (choose with 1,2,3 or 4) also sickle is pretty much useless since you can cut glass without it.//
– Real player with 7.6 hrs in game
A cute, fun farming game with unique gameplay that makes it a great game to play in short bursts with a group of friends. If you are looking for a serious farming simulator or some ultra-complex strategic multiplayer game, this isn’t the game for you, but if you just want something that you can hop right on, spend less than 5 minutes learning the controls, and have fun – definitely check this out.
It’s also free-to-play without a cash shop for overpowered items or paywalls restricting what you can do. Definitely refreshing to see a game like that these days, given much worse games in the free-to-play category often try to shake you down for cash these days.
– Real player with 6.6 hrs in game
RPG MO
Whether you’re a casual player who enjoys a steady sense of progression or someone who’s a little more competitive RPG MO has something for anyone with it’s minimalist design and charming graphics it’s difficult to not get hooked once you’ve gotten past the initial learning curve.
The gameplay is generally not intensive and can be a perfect way to relax or play along side other games depending on the activity. Skills and combat are not difficult and is click and wait for the most part which could put some people off but i think is a huge positive as the game isn’t taking itself too seriously, the “hard” part is the planning and preparation. This is a sandbox mmo so you have no real set path to take but you have a choice of skilling, pvm, community events, exploration and pvp.
– Real player with 9520.4 hrs in game
This is a large MMORPG with an isometric tileset, which was very popular in the 90’s. It can be played from almost anywhere: client, website, Mac, PC, Linux, Android, iOS, etc. It’s a small install (if you use a client), and it uses hardly any system resources.
The game is a freemium game, but it is not cursed with a Pay To Win culture. MOS is a currency that you can buy with real money or earn in-game and spend on special items, extra bank spaces, Market spaces, etc.
The world is split into areas named after Estonian towns: You start in Tutorial Island, but then truly begin in Dorpat. From there, you can travel via jump points or teleport scrolls & potions to other maps like Reval, Rakblood, Whiland, Walco, etc. Additionally, there are varying dungeons and towers, No Man’s Land is a dangeous PVP area, Arena is a tournament/Dual Arena mashup that allows betting, etc. The world is big!
– Real player with 1595.7 hrs in game
Potion Commotion
This review is a collaboration between [url]IndieGems[/url] and [url]Missi the Achievement Huntress[/url], feel free to check out our curator pages for more reviews like this.
This is a very basic but colorful clicker game. You’re the new assistant of a wizard and have to help him collect resources to make potions. Making potions will earn you coins with which you can buy new trees, plants or animals; or you can purchase more of what you already have. A specific item’s price goes up every time you buy it. You also get elixirs to upgrade your items to make harvesting or making potions faster. Collecting resources in this game is automatic, as are making potions. You can prioritize potion order, so you make the ones that yield the most money or ones needed for quests. Both of those actions (collecting and brewing) go faster when you click on them, but it seems to be too much effort to click on such specific and small items while a few seconds later it will be automatically collected by the game anyway.
– Real player with 161.6 hrs in game
This is a very fun clicker game!!! The cartoony graphics was what attracted me. I thought it was a magical school potion making game… not too far off, minus the magical school. At first it is a bit overwhelming… so much new stuff! But what game isn’t? You learn quickly and then you start to enjoy it! There is a farm where you grow items for potions and make them for moneys and leaves (I know they are a different currency, I just like to call them that) and also rare tokens!
Later you unlock more and more stuffs and items and eventually you notice that there is a town where you can go to and make different events happen, so they can help you. There is also a very sweet story with a guy and it just makes everything much better after you help him!
– Real player with 132.0 hrs in game
Farm Manager 2021: Prologue
As a whole, I found the game quit enjoyable to play. It was somewhat confusing… at first… especially with the placement of the power lines. With the game, Youtube is your best friend.
Would I recommend this game to play… The graphics are very good. There are plenty of tasks and challenges to complete. I am physically disabled and only have the use of my left hand. This is the first game I’ve played in a long while, that doesn’t end-up frustrating me after 5 minutes of play… and I quit the game. I have over 7 hours of play in the game, and I’ve just begun to scratch the surface of the game.
– Real player with 23.7 hrs in game
Great concept but cheap and buggy implementation. Not sure if i want to buy full game.
Even in this relatively content-poor demo i’ve encountered too much problems (both bugs and game design flaws) and in the full game with much more content there will be much more problems.
What i’ve seen so far:
1)Bugs:
-Saved game doesn’t load
-Some fields are only being plowed and cultivated but never sown for unknown reason no matter how long i wait, while adjacent field works fine
-So called “organic” weed isn’t being produced. Despite sowing organic seed i still harvest casual weed
– Real player with 17.6 hrs in game
Restaurant Empire II
I’ve played Restaurant Empire II off and on over many years (counting that the first game is included in II). When buying REII you get the full original RE game included.
The graphics are basic, the AI of customers and staff very limited, and the interface clunky in that you have to do a lot manually and one by one - for example you have to add recipes individually to the restaurant menu. But. I find it strangely compelling to try to get my chef up to 100% skill levels in as many recipes as possible, moving him between cuisines to round off his skills.
– Real player with 238.5 hrs in game
As a fan of the first Restaurant Empire game, at first I was disappointed with this one. A lot of the animations are the same, and this game adds coffee and dessert shops, so you have customers eating sandwiches and cookeis with forks and knives. Also, all the customers are talking on cell phones and using laptops now, which is annoying when you’re waiting for a chance to click on them. I actually quit the game for a long time because of these irritations.
However, I recently came back to it and I’m glad I did. It’s a lot of fun as a strategy game, and still fun just to tinker around with the restaurants and watch the chefs cook. The first game lacked female chefs, aside from Delia, but this time there are plenty of them, and that’s a welcome change too. The game isn’t very difficult, but it has some challenge to it, and it’s hard to find challenging strategy games these days.
– Real player with 107.9 hrs in game