![]() While they do give little hints about how to grow different things during the game, and encourage you to experiment, the truth is there’s over 100 different crops to grow and mutate and it can get a little overwhelming for a new player (especially things like Cranberries that have to be in swampy water, not adjacent to each other, with a specific fertilizer, and at a low elevation). To figure out what grows when, and how you grow various mutations, you need to get yourself a Guide. Tip: Rowan the Harvest Sprite “helps your crops grow” by raising their health. The more you fertilize, the healthier it’ll be! The Healthier the plant, the better chance it’ll mutate into something else. Mutations occur when a crop grows into a different crop due to certain growing conditions (such as the example above: Planting Strawberries in Winter can result in getting White Berries.)Īn invisible stat that effects Mutations is your crop’s Health. This combines the best of both worlds, giving you flexibility in your farming, while also keeping some of the challenge.īut as the title of this section says, a great deal of the game’s unique farming mechanic revolves around Mutations. For example, you can only get “Great” quality Strawberries during Spring, and White Berries can only be mutated from Strawberries in the Winter. That isn’t to say seasons don’t matter, though! Each plant does best during a certain season. That’s right! No seasonal limitations! If you want to grow strawberries in winter, you can do it! ![]() One of the coolest things about SV as a game, is that you can grow any seed in any season. The amount of water your watering can holds never changes, but the amount you can water at once will upgrade with the can. ![]() Tip: Your watering can holds 200 plots worth of water. It’s a bit more help in early game when you can only till one plot at a time. Lastly, don’t forget that you can change your farming view by pressing Select. It’s not a huge deal, but it is something to keep in mind when you’re planting giant fields. You have all the options!Ĭollecting and planting crops, as well as fertilizing, however, stays locked at 3x3 grids. Even with the 9x9 tool, I can still make 1x1 squares, or hold down to do a 1x3 set, or a 3x3, or the 5x5. The best part? After you upgrade, you don’t have to make farm plots that large. You start with a 1x1 tool (each hit creates one farmable plot) and eventually work your way up to a Goddess Tier tool that creates 9x9 plots (that’s 81 farmable squares at once!). The tools of SV are some of the most flexible in the entirety of this game genre, and they make farming really fun and really slick once you figure them out. The more you farm, water, mine, and collect different crop and animal product types, the more tool upgrades you unlock (you want to do this). ![]() There are tool upgrades in this game and you get them from the Harvest Goddess. So let’s get started! Check below the cut for the full guide. You might have seen some of these tips floating around my blog before, but I wanted to collect them all into one place. However, once I got past the frustration and dug into some guides, I found the game to be a relaxing, fun experience that has moved it way up on my list of favorite games.Īs such, I’m going to share a “Things I wish I had known when I started” guide, to help lesson the frustration of relearning and let the game shine. When I started playing Skytree Village (SV), I will admit I found the game very frustrating because a lot of the game mechanics are very different from the older Harvest Moon games (Produced by Marvelous, Inc.). Today, I want to talk about one of my favorites: Harvest Moon: Skytree Village (Published & developed by Natsume for the 3DS). All of the various series do something a little different, and that’s awesome! ![]() Hello! Out of my adventures in Farming Life RPG games, I’ve found I enjoy pretty much all of them. ![]()
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