| Rating: | 5 (1 votes) |
| Played: | 1 times |
| Classification: | Simulator Games |
When I first loaded Grow My Farm, I did exactly what the game seemed to encourage.
I planted every empty plot.
For the first few minutes, it felt satisfying watching the whole field turn green. Then everything finished growing at the same time. I'd spend half a minute harvesting, sell everything, replant, and suddenly... there was nothing left to do except wait.
It wasn't until I started balancing crops with livestock that my farm actually felt busy.
Grow My Farm is a relaxing farming simulation game where you turn a small patch of land into a profitable farm. You plant crops, raise animals, harvest fresh products, and sell everything to earn coins. As your business grows, you can unlock larger fields, upgrade equipment, and manage a much bigger farming operation.
The controls stay simple, so most of your attention goes into deciding what to grow and where to spend your coins.
This was easily my biggest mistake.
Every time I harvested in Grow My Farm, I'd immediately replant every single space. It looked efficient, but it created long stretches where I had nothing to do except walk around waiting for the next harvest.
After a while, I started leaving a few plots empty on purpose. That gave me room to plant new seeds right away whenever I bought them instead of clearing space later. It also meant I could keep moving between different jobs instead of repeating the exact same routine every few minutes.
The farm simply flowed better.
I ignored the animals longer than I should have.
At first, crops looked like the fastest way to earn coins, so that's where I invested everything. But once I added a few animals, the pace changed completely.
While crops were still growing, I always had something else to collect or manage. Those small tasks filled the downtime that used to make the early Grow My Farm game feel slow, and my income became much more consistent.
The first time I bought a bigger field, I actually regretted it. There was more to harvest, more to plant, and I was still using the same basic tools. The extra land didn't make me richer right away - it just gave me more work. Since then, I always upgrade my tools before buying more space.
Grow My Farm isn't about rushing to own the biggest field. The game became much more enjoyable once I stopped planting everything at once and started treating the farm like a small business instead of a race. Mixing crops with livestock, upgrading tools early, and keeping different jobs running at the same time made progress feel steady from one harvest to the next.
Simulator Games