![]() Here, you have to do it all manually and I can’t help but wonder why is this option only available in the mobile versions? Being able to automate that – especially the return trip – was fantastic. Driving wheat and whatnot across the map, then driving back to the farm, is perhaps the most boring task you could perform and that’s saying a lot. ![]() It sounds like a frivolous complaint, I know, but the mobile versions implemented this feature and it’s spoiled me. Which brings me to my one big gripe about Farming Simulator: Nintendo Switch Edition (and all of the console/PC games, really): you can’t hire people to haul goods for you. It keeps things running smoothly, but it gets a bit dull to just haul goods off to market over and over again while the fields are being tended. My personal approach is usually to start a procession of vehicles going, each autonomously controlled by hired hands, so that I can harvest, till and re-seed a field in short order. Conversely, if you want to slow everything down to realtime – or almost realtime – you can do that, too. You can delve into the options and mess with things like how fast time passes, how quickly crops grow, whether or not crops can wither and die, so if you want to speed things up a bit, you can. The entire point is to plant crops, harvest crops, sell crops and buy better equipment so you can repeat the cycle with better stuff. It’s that game, plus the option of portability.įrom a less familiar standpoint, it’s worth knowing that this game isn’t exciting. ![]() So, if you’ve played and enjoyed (or hated, really) any of the Farming Simulator games, especially ’17, then you don’t really need to read more of this. This particular version is merely Farming Simulator 17 on the Switch (as opposed to the PS4, XboxOne and PC editions that came out in 2016), but that’s okay because it means I get to enjoy my virtual farming on a TV or on the go without missing a beat – the perk of Nintendo’s console that everyone was skeptical about but turned out to be kind of awesome just like the DS. The same holds true for Farming Simulator: Nintendo Switch Edition, naturally. While I can’t say I care one way or the other about what tractor brands are included or which geographical locations I’m allowed to set up shop in, I do find the plodding and methodical (read: slow and dull) task of growing digital crops to be quite pleasant. Now, let’s dive into our top 15 best simulation games for Nintendo Switch.The Farming Simulator series isn’t something I’ve been staying on top of with regularity, but I’m not new to it either. There are many, many Switch simulation games out there, but we have spent some time finding the best of the best. Simulation games are a fun experience and often allow you to play out worlds that you would otherwise dream of being in, or find experiences unlike the ones you could do in real life. In case you prefer to play the RPG games on your Switch, here is the list of best ones released so far!.There are lots of different simulator games, and often I feel that management games fit the bill too, but this list is going to stick to more games that allow you to live in a world different from your own. Simulation games allow you to live another life, away from the one you are currently in, playing as completely different characters often in a different world. After the popularity of Animal Crossing: New Horizons, the simulation genre has really been quite popular.
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