In Disney Dreamlight Valley’s A Rift in Time, time is twisted, and miracles abound. Now, we’ve got a trio of ancient machines that’ll make your head spin faster than Alice down the rabbit hole.
01.12.2023 - 23:45 / polygon.com
I didn’t like fishing when I first played Stardew Valley. It was winter of 2016, and I was playing the game nonstop.
I loved building my farm. I loved planting seasonal crops. I loved talking to townsfolk, and going to festivals, and communing with my dead grandpa, and getting rebuffed by a gruff man who just wants chickens.
But I gave up on the fishing almost immediately.
It’s a notoriously annoying part of Stardew. The fish bob up and down erratically, the rectangle is floaty and feels IMPOSSIBLE to control, but you have to keep it moving, but not too fast and not too slow, and hopefully — eventually — the experience will be over.
Now I find fishing one of the most satisfying things I can do in games. You show me fishing? I will show you a game that goes to the top of my to-play list.
And the thing that changed my mind about it was Ernest Hemingway.
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In Disney Dreamlight Valley’s A Rift in Time, time is twisted, and miracles abound. Now, we’ve got a trio of ancient machines that’ll make your head spin faster than Alice down the rabbit hole.
Farmers eager for a reason to return to Stardew Valley will be glad to know creator Eric «ConcernedApe» Barone has confirmed a «ton of progress» has been made on the lifestyle sim's eagerly-anticipated 1.6 update. Taking to <a href=«https://twitter.com/ConcernedApe/status/1730673829083775387?ref_src=» https:>Twitter
Mech-farming sim Lightyear Frontier has confirmed its release for next March, landing around a year after the delayed chill space game was originally meant to touch down on Planet PC.
is launching out of early access and is celebrating its release by also debuting a new expansion pass. This expansion to the game has much more content than any of the previously seen Dream Bundles, which only had a couple of quests and outfits. appears to nearly double the size of the game by adding in an entirely new area consisting of three biomes, new resources, characters, and an involved story campaign that will take place over several chapters.
One Eric “ConcernedApe” Barone has been hard at work on the next update for Stardew Valley. While the creator is taking their time to make sure the patch is ready for release, they have made it clear that progress is coming along, while also sharing a little tease.
The developer of Terraria has revealed the worst part of creating one of the biggest indie games ever - and it's related to Stardew Valley.
Stardew Valley creator Erik ‘Concerned Ape’ Barone has taken to X/Twitter to give fans a progress report on the RPG's highly anticipated 1.6 update, and to shed light on his motivation for continuing to work on the popular 2016 farming sim over seven years after it came out.
The creator of Stardew Valley has called the farming sim his "life's work" and revealed it's the players that motivate him to keep developing it.
Stardew Valley developer Eric «ConcernedApe» Barone has emerged from a month of silence to say that he has made «a ton of progress» on the upcoming 1.6 update for the beloved indie farm and life sim.
Stardew Valley developer Eric Barone, also known as ConcernedApe, says he is currently in "(self-imposed) extreme crunch mode" while working on the pastoral life sim's 1.6 update. When asked what motivates him to keep working on the already-beloved game, Barone called Stardew his "life's work."
Stardew Valley creator Eric «ConcernedApe» Barone says he is in the midst of a «self-imposed crunch mode» as he gets Stardew Valley's 1.6 update ready for release.
Eric ‘ConcernedApe’ Barone continues to tease Stardew Valley’s next major 1.6 update, this time revealing an expanded storage option for the pixel farmers, hoarders, and foragers still playing the smash hit indie.