Tags / farming

"farming"

11 BuzzVerdicts across PC Games (1), Mobile Games (3), Board Games (7)

Stardew Valley

4.7

2016 · Farming Sim / RPG · PC / Steam

Stardew Valley is one of those rare games that gets better the longer you play it, and better still the longer its creator keeps updating it. What started as a solo developer's passion project has become one of the most content-rich, community-supported games on PC. The grind will test some players' patience, and the early hours don't always explain themselves well, but what's waiting on the other side is hundreds of hours of warm, addictive, endlessly rewarding gameplay. Over 50 million copies sold for a reason.

Stardew Valley

4.5

2019 · Simulation / Farming RPG

Stardew Valley on mobile is one of the best deals in gaming. For a few dollars you get hundreds of hours of farming, fishing, mining, and small-town life with zero ads and zero microtransactions. Touch controls work well for the relaxed pace of daily farm life, even if combat and fishing feel clunkier than they should. A tablet makes the experience noticeably better, but even on a phone this is a remarkably complete, endlessly absorbing game that most players struggle to put down. If you want a portable version of one of the best indie games ever made, this delivers.

Fields of Arle

4.3

2014 · 1-2 Players · 90-120 min · Competitive / Worker Placement

Fields of Arle is Uwe Rosenberg's most generous design, a sprawling sandbox of farming, crafting, and trading that gives two players or a solo gamer the freedom to build almost anything without punishment for experimentation. That same generosity costs it the knife-edge tension of Agricola or Caverna, but what replaces that tension is something rarer: a game that rewards curiosity over optimization and feels different every single time you sit down.

Agricola

4.1

2007 · 1-5 Players · 30-120 min · Worker Placement / Resource Management

Agricola remains one of the defining worker placement games nearly two decades after release, and its influence on the genre is impossible to overstate. The feeding pressure that earns it the nickname 'misery farm' is also what makes every decision feel urgent and every completed harvest feel earned. Card draw luck and a steep learning curve will push away players looking for a relaxed farming experience, but for those who want a tight, tense puzzle that plays differently every session, this is still one of the best in the hobby. It has aged remarkably well.

Hallertau

4.0

2020 · 1-4 Players · 50-140 min · Competitive

Hallertau is Uwe Rosenberg operating in a sweet spot between accessibility and depth. The progressive worker placement keeps turns moving, the crop rotation adds a layer of planning that feels fresh even in a catalog full of farming games, and the card variety ensures no two sessions play out the same way. It's a table hog with small cards and a box that's mostly empty space, and the community center puzzle may become too predictable for experienced players. But the core loop of growing crops, raising sheep, fulfilling contracts, and upgrading your farmstead is deeply satisfying. This is one of the smoothest and most enjoyable entries in a legendary designer's catalog.

Agricola: All Creatures Big and Small

4.0

2012 · 2 Players · 30-45 min · Competitive

Agricola: All Creatures Big and Small distills worker placement into one of the best two-player experiences the format has produced. It's fast, it's tense, and every game puts you in a position where there's one more thing you want to do and not enough turns to do it. The base game shows its limits with repeat play, but as a pure test of planning and adaptation between two players, it's exceptional.

Caverna: The Cave Farmers

4.0

2013 · 1-7 Players · ~30-210 min · Competitive

Caverna is a sprawling sandbox of a worker placement game that gives players enormous freedom in how they build their farms and caverns. It trades the punishing tension of its predecessor for a more relaxed, exploratory experience that rewards creative strategy over survival. That trade-off loses some players and wins others, but the sheer breadth of options and the satisfaction of building something unique keep it firmly among the top tier of heavy Euro games.

La Granja

3.8

2014 · 1-4 Players · ~90-120 min · Euro / Card-Driven

La Granja is a clever euro with one of the best multi-use card systems in the hobby, giving every hand of cards a satisfying web of possibilities. The combination of card play, dice drafting, and market competition creates a game with real strategic depth that scales well at lower player counts and has aged better than many of its 2014 peers. Fiddliness across its many round phases and a feeling of borrowed mechanics keep it from the top tier, and players who dislike card luck influencing their strategic options may find the randomness frustrating. For euro fans who enjoy puzzling out card combos and don't mind a learning curve, La Granja rewards repeated plays with new discoveries.

Hay Day

3.8

2012 · Simulation

Hay Day is a farming simulation that has lasted over a decade because its core loop of growing, crafting, and trading is deeply satisfying in a way that most free-to-play games never achieve. The timer-based progression will frustrate impatient players, and Supercell clearly wants you to spend diamonds to skip the wait, but the game never forces it. If you're looking for a relaxing mobile game that rewards patience and gives you something pleasant to check in on throughout the day, Hay Day remains one of the best in its category.

Stardew Valley: The Board Game

3.8

2021 · 1-4 Players · ~45-200 min · Cooperative

A board game that earns its license rather than coasting on it. The theme is faithfully translated, the cooperation works well, and the replay value holds up. Randomness and difficulty will divide players, and the gap between the Stardew Valley name and what this game actually asks of you is something every buyer should understand before opening the box. Go in prepared for a challenge and it delivers.

Township

3.5

2013 · Simulation

Township blends farming and city building into a combination that works better than it should, creating a satisfying loop of growing, producing, and expanding. The amount of content available after a decade of updates is staggering, and casual players can spend months exploring new features and events. Monetization leans hard on impatience, and the higher you climb, the more the game wants you to spend to keep pace. If you enjoy building and optimizing at your own speed and can ignore the spending prompts, Township is a well-made time investment.