I have released my video game! It's a cozy, kid friendly farm simulator called Farm Hand. It's available on Itch for Mac, Linux, and Windows and free or pick your own price. It's also open source and you can find out all about it here:
I have released my video game! It's a cozy, kid friendly farm simulator called Farm Hand. It's available on Itch for Mac, Linux, and Windows and free or pick your own price. It's also open source and you can find out all about it here:
xattr -cr /Applications/FarmHand.app/ in terminal for it to not lie about it being corrupt (this is a pretty common thing now with itch games on MacOS but it might be worth adding to the install instructions)Thank you for letting me know that! That's so weird, and I'll add it to the instructions. I'm slowly working on doing all the xcode signing and stuff, so maybe that'll go away?
My munchkin is about 3 and a half. He struggles using the controller, but likes moving the vehicles around and likes watching me do it. We do very little screen time in the house but a child that has played some games may have developed the coordination to steer the vehicles.
Other design decisions I made for young ones is that the quests can be repeated by just restarting the game. You can do any quest in any order. I try to use icons instead of words in most places.
1/n
It is also completely non-violent. There are quests to feed animals, but they will never be animals in the game that will be used for food (either they are sanctuary animals, like the horses, or used for eggs or wool production, like the chickens). Other quests like checking in on the bluebird boxes are there because they serve ecological purposes. The whole premise of the story is about helping others.
Let me know if that answers your questions!
2/2
Another thought, lol. I should toss in the caveat that I'm not an expert in childhood development, nor has such an export reviewed the content of the game, so my statements are based upon my parenting and what I believe to be solid common sense. The game is calm, peaceful, and hopefully just offers a lovely environment with some rewarding, nature-themed activities.
3/3 (for real this time)
Yeah, it's really hard. PBS kids has lots of content that is at least well thought out, but still not perfect if you're looking for more ideas. Good luck!
We do a fair amount of nature documentaries too. It may still not apply but PBS definitely has at least some Spanish language stuff.