It's cozy gaming season! Video game updates you may have missed,including Stardew Valley
From
Dimensional Traveler@dtravel@sonic.net to
comp.sys.ibm.pc.games.action on Tue Nov 5 18:24:05 2024
From Newsgroup: comp.sys.ibm.pc.games.action
USA Today
Move over comfort food, make room for comfort games.
As the weather gets cooler and the days get shorter, it's the perfect
time to curl up with cozy, calming video games.
While there are quite a few new games to explore (see previous lists
here and here), there have also been significant updates to some
favorites from the past few years.
Here's what to know about some recent cozy game updates:
Stardew Valley (Switch, PS4, Xbox One, mobile, PC)
The long-anticipated 1.6 update for Stardew Valley finally hit consoles Monday.
In this cozy simulation game, which first released in 2016, the player inherits a farm, works the land and builds relationships with residents
in the valley. Other activities include mining ore and fighting enemies
a cave, cooking recipes and taking on quests to add new areas to explore.
The expansive free update (version 1.6.9), which first rolled out in
March for PC, includes new festivals, a new farm type, new home
renovations, new crops, a new quest, new dialogue, new NPC outfits,
dozens of new items and visual and functional improvements throughout.
It is the first major update for the game since 1.5, which released in
2020 on PC and 2021 for console.
Game developer ConcernedApe (Eric Barone) said that while players will
get to check out plenty of new content with existing saves, starting a
new farm after updating would allow players to experience more of the additions fresh and in better context.
A Little to the Left (Switch, Xbox One, Xbox X/S, PC)
A Little to the Left, first released in 2022 by publisher Secret Mode,
is a charming puzzle game focused on organizing objects, though a
mischievous cat may occasionally derail progress.
New downloadable content, Seeing Stars, released in June and be
purchased for the game, adding dozens more levels, including bonus
puzzles. The DLC is the second one released after Cupboards & Drawers
(2023), in addition to the Daily Tidy puzzles released each day.
Wylde Flowers (Switch, PC, mobile)
We can finally fix that lighthouse in the latest update for Wylde Flowers.
This cozy life and farming sim game, first released in 2022, follows
Tara, who comes to Fairhaven to help her sick grandmother on the farm —
and finds out she's a witch. Aside from the usual goals of planting
crops, cooking and meeting villagers, Tara will also join a coven and
learn more about her magical powers. The game's charming storyline is
made all the sweeter by great voice acting.
Two big free updates were released for the game in 2024. The first this
year released in February and brought hairstyles, a new salon and a new character. The second came in September and included magical creatures
and the ability to finally repair the island's lighthouse. It served as
the final major update for the game, according to developer Studio Drydock.
Moonstone Island (Switch, PC)
Moonstone Island has had a few updates and DLC options since it first
released in 2023 and ported to the Switch in June.
The life sim game, set in the sky, is sort of like crossing Stardew
Valley and Pokemon. You play as a young alchemist who must leave home
for a year to learn, collecting and battling creatures, farming,
fishing, exploring the other islands and getting to know the people who
live on Moonstone Island.
Two recent DLCs from developer Studio Supersoft and publisher Raw Fury
added more creatures, festivals and cooking quests (Chef's Kiss, which released in July) and additional items (Autumnal Accessories, which
released in September).
Of note, Moonstone Island has a deluxe edition that bundles all existing
as as well as future DLC for the game, so the deluxe version may be
worth considering for those still on the fence about purchasing.
Fae Farm (Switch, PS4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox X/S, PC)
Fae Farm is an adorable life and farming sim from publisher Phoenix
Labs, where players create a homestead in an enchanting world, Azoria,
which is filled with magic, mystery and plenty to do, craft, customize
and discover. The game was first released in 2023 and ported to
PlayStation and Xbox in October.
The Skies of Azoria DLC, released in June, is a free update for Switch
and the PC Deluxe Edition, and it's the second major update for the
game. The update takes players into a new realm in the sky and includes
new activities, more items, new characters and new adventures.
No Man's Sky (Switch, PS4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox X/S, PC)
No Man's Sky is an open-world game that takes players to the final
frontier and beyond
The space exploration game, first released in 2022 from publisher Hello
Games, allows players to venture to countless varied planets, gathering resources and crafting tools. The normal mode might be a a little less calming, but the game does offer a "relaxed mode," which reduces combat
and allows players to take a more leisurely journey through the universe.
Recent free updates for No Man's Sky include Aquarius, which released in September and brought fishing, a new area, new expeditions and new items
to the game; and Cursed, released in October, which introduced spectral anomalies, a new threat and blurs reality in the gameplay.
--
I've done good in this world. Now I'm tired and just want to be a cranky
dirty old man.
--- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114
From
Spalls Hurgenson@spallshurgenson@gmail.com to
comp.sys.ibm.pc.games.action on Wed Nov 6 09:52:05 2024
From Newsgroup: comp.sys.ibm.pc.games.action
On Tue, 5 Nov 2024 18:24:05 -0800, Dimensional Traveler
<
dtravel@sonic.net> wrote:
No Man's Sky (Switch, PS4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox X/S, PC)
Of all these, "No Man's Sky" seems to least fit the concept of "cozy"
gaming. I mean, can it really be a 'cozy' game when a) its environs
span an entire galaxy, and b) it has combat in it? Sure, the combat
may not be the focus of the game, but whatever you may call a place
where there are aliens out to eat me, 'cozy' is not the word to use.
Then again, it's old-media and they've never really had a good grasp
of what video games are. The article smacks of being one part, "hey
look, we're talking video games, we're still relevant" and one part
advertorial for the aforementioned games. Then again, it's "USA
Today", one of the more fatuous examples of American media.
But that aside... ;-)
I never really cared for so-called 'cozy' games; Stardew Valley,
Harvest Moon, and the rest. I've no problem with them and obviously
they fill the need of a certain segment of the gaming audience, so its
great that they exist, but I'm personally bored to tears by that
genre. I guess that's how other people look at my "Truck Simulator"
addiction. ;-)
Still, I'm fairly certain there are some fans of the genre in this
newsgroup, so reading up on those updates is probably a welcome change
from our usual talk about insects and NFTs.
--- Synchronet 3.20a-Linux NewsLink 1.114