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Farming simulator 19 review12/20/2023 ![]() ![]() ![]() In the interests of a lifelike simulation, each tool requires multiple steps to use: you have to back-up your tractor and attach it first, unfold it (if it’s a tool that needs unfolding), lower it to the ground, and turn it on.įrom there, it’s all about trying to make sure the field is thoroughly covered, but without too much overlap creating pointless extra work. Though this process largely involves driving a tractor up and down the field, it’s more involved than one might initially expect. In the latter case, you’ll take on odd jobs for other farms to earn a crust until you can afford your own land, but either way, your farm adventure starts with a lot of grunt work: cultivate a field, sow your choice of crop, harvest it when it’s fully grown, and then sell your harvest at one of the nearby silos and refineries. ![]() The bigger-picture farm management adds a layer of welcome complexity, but it’s that in moment-to-moment work-which could quite fairly be described as tedious busywork-that Farming Simulator 19 scratches a very particular itch.ĭepending on what game mode you choose, you’ll either start with a functioning but barebones farm-a couple of tractors and some basic equipment-or nothing. Even as someone with next to no knowledge of (or interest in) farming, I found an almost meditative quality to the mundane process of ploughing your fields, growing crops, harvesting them, selling the spoils, and then doing it all again the next day. There’s something oddly soothing about the menial work that makes up the bulk of a game like Farming Simulator 19. ![]()
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