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Harvest Moon is a farm simulation role-playing video game series published by Natsume Inc. The main objective of the games is to rebuild a run-down old farm and turn it into a successful one. Previously, Natsume Inc. published the series Bokujō Monogatari in North America under the title Harvest Moon .
Known in Japan as Bokujō Monogatari: Harvest Moon Boy and Girl (牧場物語ハーベストムーン ボーイ&ガール, lit. "The Farm Story: Harvest Moon Boy & Girl") [51] It is a compilation of Harvest Moon: Back to Nature and Bokujō Monogatari Harvest Moon for Girl [25] Released on PlayStation Network in 2008 [26]
As in most Harvest Moon games, players can grow crops and raise livestock. They also opt to get married, have a child, buy animals, and help villagers with requests. In the Special Edition, there is a playable character named Soleil (whose gender varies) who can be controlled by a second player. [6]
Harvest Moon: Tree of Tranquility expands on this by letting the player restart the game as their child after the completion of an end game event. Harvest Moon: Save the Homeland, Harvest Moon GB, Harvest Moon 2 GBC and Innocent Life: A Futuristic Harvest Moon are the only Story of Seasons titles in which the player cannot marry.
Harvest Moon, known in Japan as Farm Story (牧場物語, Bokujō Monogatari), is a farm simulation role-playing video game developed by Amccus for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. The game first was released in Japan by Pack-In-Video in 1996, in North America by Natsume Inc. in 1997, and in Europe by Nintendo in 1998.
Stardew Valley is a farming simulation game primarily inspired by Story of Seasons, a series by Marvelous and previously known as Harvest Moon. [1] At the start of the game, players create a character, who inherits a plot of land and a small house once owned by their grandfather in a small village called Pelican Town, located in the titular ...
Harvest Moon: A Wonderful Life [a] is a video game that was released in Japan in September 2003 and March 2004 in North America for the GameCube.It was developed and published by Marvelous Interactive in Japan (Natsume Inc. published it worldwide), and is part of the long-running Story of Seasons series of video games.
Rune Factory: A Fantasy Harvest Moon received an 8.4 rating from IGN's Mark Bozon. Bozon commented that the art style was "amazing", and that it was "the Harvest Moon you've been waiting for". [79] 7/10 from Nintendo Power, and 4/5 from X-Play. IGN rated Rune Factory 2: A Fantasy Harvest Moon at 8.4/10, commenting on its similarity to the ...