This means the game is actively encouraging you to be more actively seeking interaction with NPCS to fill your day. The days are much shorter and the clock moves at an alarming pace, with the only respite being when time stops when you are indoors. Well, aside from the new plotline that Save The Homeland follows, this game aspires to be much more social than the other outings. They all culminate to offer a really pretty and aesthetically pleasing place to spend hours of in-game time. The falling of leaves, the sheets of white snow. Then there is the changing of the seasons that, although very simple in premise, really does add another level of visual splendour to your humble little town. The in-game features and items are much more detailed and dynamic, the animations for the NPC’s and your own character are much more smooth and in the town itself is a real sight to behold.
However, where other titles in the series looked rather primitive, the move to fifth-generation console hardware has allowed for a real step up in class. While this game is by no means a visual masterclass, it offers a lovely pixelated aesthetic that really fits the laid back nature of the title. Although it can seem a little overwhelming at first, the routine you create becomes second nature in no time at all. The activities and gameplay are very familiar for any returning player, you’ll sow crops, play with your dog, talk to the townsfolk and build relationships, learn to cook, enjoy some romantic encounters and catch a big fish if you can fit that all into a hectic daily schedule.
It’s a predictable storyline but one that gives the player more than enough motivation to build the farm in their own image.
You inherit your grandfathers overgrown and unkempt farmstead and are given the task of turning it into the beating heart of the town, restoring a hearty economy and sense of togetherness with the townsfolk and ridding the evil corporation that aims to tear down the area in favour of building a theme park.
The game begins as all games of this nature begin as if it is an unwritten rule that they must start this way.