
The game is essentially a well-designed, incredibly involving test to see how well you can manage resources. All of this will help in shooting for that ultimate dream: a cottage in town, a beautiful wife, and a healthy child. Naturally, you'll have to spend money to make money, and that comes in the form of buying cows for milk, sheep for wool, and chickens for eggs, additional income to provide more money for chicken feed and animal fodder, medicine for the sick, and upgrades to the barn, chicken coop, and house that will enable more generated income. The task is to, of course, get the farm up and running and maintain it enough to generate enough cashflow. The old man left all the necessary equipment to get the farm going, but it's going to take a lot of hard work to get the farm in working condition. With no prior obligations in your life, it's time to start a new one in Mineral Town. He had no real family or friends, but enjoyed the short time spent on his farm in your childhood.

Harvest Moon: Friends of Mineral Town begins as simple as it looks: you've just inherited a farm from an old man who passed away months ago.


And that is exactly the game's intention: to give you a life away from your life. The game made a decent splash on the Game Boy and Game Boy Color, but no handheld version is as deep as what Natsume has put into the Game Boy Advance version.so much that it will absolutely suck every precious spare minute of your life if you're not careful.

Harvest Moon: Friends of Mineral Town is that game. With the dozens of games releasing within the months of November and December, it would have to take a very special game to draw my attention away for an entire weekend of non-stop gaming.
