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===Defeating monsters===
===Defeating monsters===
In [[Rune Factory: A Fantasy Harvest Moon]] you can also fight monsters. You could use farming tools, or swords and axes.
In [[Rune Factory: A Fantasy Harvest Moon]] you can also fight monsters. You could use farming tools, or swords and axes.

==Harvest Moon for Girls==
{{main|Harvest Moon: Back to Nature|Harvest Moon: Another Wonderful Life}}
'''''Harvest Moon for Girls''''' is a subcategory of the ''Harvest Moon'' game series.

The first ''Harvest Moon for Girls'' title, '''[[Harvest Moon: Back to Nature for Girl]]''' (Japan: ''Harvest Moon For Girl(s)''), was first released in [[Japan]] for [[PlayStation]], and is the same game as ''[[Harvest Moon: Back to Nature]]'', but with girl-oriented events and the ability to marry 5 bachelors and the game ending when the main character has a child. Due to the limited nature of the game and the male dominated overseas [[PlayStation]] market [[Natsume Co., Ltd|Natsume]] initially chose not to release a U.S. version of the game, but did later include it bundled with the boy version for the 2007 PSP port ''[[Harvest Moon: Boy & Girl]]''.

Second in the series was a remake of Back to Nature (''[[Harvest Moon: Friends of Mineral Town for Girls]]''), for [[Game Boy Advance]], which was given a U.S. release under the name '''[[Harvest Moon: More Friends of Mineral Town]]'''. The third girl oriented game, ''[[Harvest Moon: A Wonderful Life for Girls]]'', was also released in the U.S. as '''[[Harvest Moon: Another Wonderful Life]]'''.


==List of Games==
==List of Games==

Revision as of 12:25, 11 October 2007

File:Harvest Moon SNES title screen.png
Harvest Moon on the SNES
Yasuhiro Wada redirects here. For the Honda Racing F1 manager, see Yasuhiro Wada (Honda).

Harvest Moon (牧場物語, Bokujō Monogatari, lit. "Farm Story") is the name of a series of farm simulation/role-playing video games produced by Victor Interactive Software (acquired by Marvelous Interactive in 2002). Yasuhiro Wada is considered the father of the Harvest Moon series. English translation and distribution of the game is done by Natsume. The object of the game is to maintain a farm over a period of time, tending the crops and livestock through the seasons, while befriending the nearby townsfolk and getting married in some games. The first game was Harvest Moon, released for the SNES in 1997. Games in the series have also been produced for Game Boy and GBA, Nintendo 64, PlayStation, PlayStation 2, GameCube and Nintendo DS; with new titles for PSP, Nintendo DS, and an upcoming release for the Wii.

Most Harvest Moon games are permutations of a central formula. The game generally takes place over a set period of time (generally 3 years), in which the player is charged with the task of running a successful farm, getting married, having a child, and becoming friends with the townsfolk.

Most gameplay in the Harvest Moon games consists of planting seeds to grow fruits, vegetables, flowers and herbs in the spring, summer, and autumn, and collecting items, making home improvements, and building personal relationships in the winter. A successful farmer must weigh the cost, selling price, number of harvests, and growth times of the various types of produce in order to pick the best product for each of the seasons. You can also go fishing.

The player must also balance their physical resources; if players over-exert themselves, they might not have the energy to perform needed activities, or might even get sick and miss a day of farming.

Activities

A number of activities are common to all Harvest Moon games. They are listed as next.

Growing produce

This is the central aspect to all the games. The player must find optimal planting, watering, and harvesting patterns. Finding the most profitable plants, clearing space for planting, and harvesting the crops before winter rolls around are key to gaining money. In the games, each season has different crops available for planting, except for winter, when crops cannot grow and the player must rely on foraging, mining and livestock for income (except in A Wonderful Life and Another Wonderful Life). Some crops, such as turnips and onions, only grow once, while other crops, such as corn and sweet potatoes, can be harvested several times, until the season ends.

Turnips, potatoes, tomatoes and corn are staple crops of the series, introduced in the first game. Since then, other games have introduced new crops, such as cabbage, carrots, onions, strawberries, sweet potatoes, pumpkins, rice, pineapples, and more.

Ranching livestock

An increasingly large part of the games is purchasing, caring for, and raising your own livestock. Livestock can bring about profits on a daily basis (e.g., the player can milk cows each day). The other end of this spectrum is caring for animals. Giving one's animals attention will increase their heart meters towards the player, and after a certain amount of time, will begin producing higher quality products. On the other hand, neglecting the animal's needs can lead to sickness and even death.

The first Harvest Moon only allowed cows and chickens and provided a barn and chicken coop to house them. Milk and eggs could both be sold, as well as the animals themselves. Later titles introduced sheep, which provided wool every few days, as well as machines that could change milk into cheese, eggs into mayonnaise, and wool into yarn. Chicken feed is needed for chickens, while it is either required or highly recommended to have grass on the farm to feed cows and sheep.

Animals are also able to reproduce. Eggs can be placed in an incubator to hatch a chick in a few days, while giving a cow or sheep a miracle potion will impregnate them.

Gathering materials

Many Harvest Moon games require the player to gather materials for home improvement, tool improvement, cooking, or simply selling. The most common resource at earlier stages of the game (in older games) is wood; the player is able to chop up tree stumps to gather wood to add buildings to his or her farm, or add fencing to keep wild dogs out of the farm. Mining has also become an important feature, and most of the minerals found while mining in caves are required to upgrade tools to better, more manageable forms, as well as craft gifts for girls or in later versions guys in town. Cooking has also become a side activity in some games, and foraged foods, crops and livestock products can all be used to create different dishes.

Festivals

Most games in the series feature annual festivals which the player can attend. Some of these may just be simple social events, while others may be contests with prizes available to the player. Sometimes festivals will be takes on real life holidays, such as Thanksgiving and the Starry Night Festival, which seems to be reminiscent of Christmas Eve. Livestock-themed festivals often take place, where the player can submit their animals to compete against other farms. Animals who win these contests often receive benefits; for example, a cow that wins might gain the ability to produce gold milk.

Players can always choose to not attend these events, but all stores also close on these days and shipped items are not picked up either, leaving few choices available outside of festivals.

Getting married

The Harvest Moon games offer many choices for potential love interests. As the player spends time with the various potential love interests, he or she learns his or her likes and dislikes, showers him or her with gifts, and eventually proposes. If a player fails to marry a character, then there are usually rival characters who will marry whoever the character didn't. Developers of the series have taken to producing both male and female versions of Harvest Moon games in recent years, allowing for different lineups of potential spouses. More recent games have begun offering a gender choice when starting a game. Only one Harvest Moon game has yet allowed players to pursue the possibility of living with someone of the same sex, Harvest Moon DS: Sprite Station for Girls (currently Japan only). A special friendship ceremony can be performed between the main character and another of the special girls instead of marriage with one of the guys in the game. In "Save the Homeland" and if the player (a male) gives flowers to another male character, he is rebuked. Also, you cannot get married.

Children

In many versions, it is possible to have children, but usually a boy, with the exceptions being Harvest Moon, Harvest Moon: A Wonderful Life Special Edition, and Harvest Moon 3. In Harvest Moon: More Friends of Mineral Town, when a girl is played, a baby girl can be born. This event occurs usually about a month after marriage. Harvest Moon and Harvest Moon 3 are also the only versions where the player can have multiple children. Harvest Moon: A Wonderful Life and its spin-offs are the only games in the series where the player can experience a child's growth from toddler to full-grown adult.

Defeating monsters

In Rune Factory: A Fantasy Harvest Moon you can also fight monsters. You could use farming tools, or swords and axes.

List of Games

Title and date of USA Release.

  1. Harvest Moon (Super Nintendo, 1996)
  2. Harvest Moon GB (Game Boy, 1997)
  3. Harvest Moon 64 (Nintendo 64, 1999)
  4. Harvest Moon 2 (Game Boy Color, 2000)
  5. Harvest Moon: Back to Nature (PlayStation, 1999)
  6. Harvest Moon 3 (Game Boy Color, 2000)
  7. Harvest Moon: Save the Homeland (PlayStation 2, 2001)
  8. Harvest Moon: Friends of Mineral Town (Game Boy Advance, 2003)
  9. Harvest Moon: A Wonderful Life (GameCube, 2004)
  10. Harvest Moon: More Friends of Mineral Town (Game Boy Advance, 2005)
  11. Harvest Moon: Another Wonderful Life (GameCube, 2005)
  12. Harvest Moon DS (Nintendo DS, 2005)
  13. Harvest Moon: Magical Melody (GameCube, 2005)
  14. Harvest Moon Boy & Girl (PSP, 2007; exactly the same as No. 5 and including its Girl Version)
  15. Puzzle de Harvest Moon (Nintendo DS, 2007)
  16. Harvest Moon DS Cute (Nintendo DS, 2008)
  17. Harvest Moon: Tree of Tranquility (Wii, 2008)
  18. Harvest Moon: Island of Happiness (Nintendo DS, 2008)
  19. Harvest Moon: Innocent Life (PSP, 2007)(PS2, upcoming)
  20. Harvest Moon: Rune Factory (Nintendo DS, 2007)
  21. Harvest Moon: Rune Factory 2 (Nintendo DS, TBA)
  22. Harvest Moon Online (PC, TBA)