Ryewood Town
Find the secrets behind Ryewood Town, with relaxing, RPG-Style adventure!
Key Features:
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Start From zero until you reach the hero! Chop the trees, cut the grass, seed the ground, raise the animals and decorate your place!
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Fully Customization, hence unique adventure! Customize your house, your character, and your farm as you want! Nothing stops you from forming your dream farm!
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Tame wild animals! From small animals to the big monsters, you can tame them all!
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Explore the whole world! from the town center, to deep inside the mountain caves, every place has its own mystery!
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Unique deep systems! It’s whether animal care, leveling up or villager’s relationship every system has its own uniqueness!
Technical Features:
Supports both Xbox One and PlayStation 4 Controller! New generation controllers will be supported soon!
Read More: Best Choices Matter RPG Games.
Forest Farm
This is entirely playable without a VR headset and has full mouse and keyboard support.
Forest Farm is the perfect answer if you want a game that has zero stress and tons of truly hands-on things to do. Your primary goal at this point in development is basically to plan out and create the perfect farm, all the while working around an oft-growing rabbit infestation. Essentially, it goes something like this: chop down tree mill lumber while growing new trees from recovered seeds craft fences/raised garden beds from lumber safely grow lots of produce profit off crop sales to villagers reinvest coin into further expansion. You also have your faithful cart horse Pedro to aid you in quickly shifting large amounts of produce from field to market, complete with first-person reins which actually work. As well, there are side activities of fishing and mining to turn a profit via fish and gem/potion sales.
– Real player with 7.8 hrs in game
Read More: Best Choices Matter RPG Games.
Read the board for quests - Plant crops, go fishing, mine some diamonds and other rocks, grow crops, pat a horse, explore, harvest crops, throw bunnies, sell crops and relax in VR!
– Real player with 1.5 hrs in game
The Isle of Elanor
The Isle of Elanor is an open-ended role playing game. It features real-time combat, a strong focus on player choice, and a High Fantasy narrative. The game borrows mechanics from Dwarf Fortress, Divinity: Original Sin 2, Stardew Valley and the Witcher Series.
You wash ashore on The Isle of Elanor, the last bastion of humanity remaining in the world. You retain only fragments of your memory – your origins are a mystery. The people of the isle are puzzled by your inexplicable arrival.
The situation on the island is grim: many people are poor, destitute, and in some cases close to starving. There’s social strife and division. You’re given a small plot of land. Can you help humanity survive?
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At the highest difficulty level, the game is meant to be challenging. If you’re not careful, you will starve.
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Select skills and attributes to determine your build: a tank, melee fighter, or a ranged attacker? Or choose a build that doesn’t specialize in combat.
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The Isle of Elanor is a game about player choice. What type of home to build? Who to befriend or who to make an enemy of?
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Set in an imaginary period of the Earth’s past, it’s a world that borrows elements from both Midgard and Middle Earth. The peoples of Middle Earth (humans, elves, dwarves, orcs, etc) appear in the game.
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Complex combat mechanics featuring single-handed (quick) and two-handed (long-range) basic attacks, skills (magic), and the use of a shield.
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Build workshops near your home and hire townspeople. This is more than a farming, fishing, and mining game. In fact, your home isn’t necessarily a farm. You can create an industrial center where you manufacture pottery, or craft weapons and armor.
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Hire townspeople to perform the mundane tasks of watering and harvesting your crops.
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Become a part of the community. Give food, items, and jobs to needy townspeople. Watch the townspeople prosper, or decline, along with the home you build. You will face the consequences of your actions.
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Deep branching dialog options. Learn about the people and the history of the island.
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Features a realistic geology model. Stone occurs in sedimentary, igneous, and metamorphic layers. Some types of stone, ore, and jewels are available to mine only in certain layers.
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Just a few of the types of stone: Bauxite, Cobalite, Granite, Gypsum, and Olivine. When you craft an item out of stone, the item retains the properties (color, weight, value) from the stone. The same mechanic applies to items crafted from wood.
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Factional alliances. The non-player characters on the island are grouped into factions. Most NPCs have families. Your relationship with one family member affects your relationship with the other family members. There are multiple towns in the game which also form factions.
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The Isle of Elanor can be played as a management game, akin to Dwarf Fortress, where you juggle the complexity of managing your employees and selecting Industries to specialize in.
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The townspeople of the island change over the course of game. Their appearance, happiness, needs, and skills evolve as the island changes. The townspeople have crafting skill levels that improve over time. Townspeople change their clothing based on the seasons and their financial wellbeing.
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The pricing of items in the game changes over time. There is a supply and demand mechanic. The more that you sell of an item, the less it is worth.
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Features an extensive main plot line that occurs over three chapters, all recorded in your journal.
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The guiding principle behind the quest system is consequences. Quests result in small changes here and there to show how the world is changed – for better or worse.
Read More: Best Choices Matter RPG Games.