‘Cozy game with consequences’ Echoes of the Plum Grove is constantly threatening me with death, taxes, and mean neighbors

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Echoes of the Plum Grove - several characters fish from a pool in a town market

Echoes of the Plum Grove may be an adorable-looking farm sim, but it’s not so much like Stardew Valley as it is like the weird community simulations in Fable and Kynseed. Its two-person development team calls it a “cozy game with consequences,” and, sure enough, the only things certain in Honeywood are death and taxes.

Plum Grove does all the usual farm sim stuff: You’ve come into possession of a small house on an overgrown plot of land where you’ll plant seasonal crops or raise livestock to make a living while doing quests and maybe finding love with one of the villagers. But on top of that is a somewhat demanding survival system. Food items perish after a few days, my tools eventually degrade and break, and I’m constantly hungry. I’ve been staring down the threat of starvation all spring, whipping myself up a “survival salad” every day because it’s the only meal I can manage to scrounge up with foraged goods.

(Image credit: Unwound Games)

The winter season is a greater threat than in most farm sims, too. You’ll need to prepare enough food to eat, which may mean butchering your cows and drying meat so it doesn’t spoil too fast. And if hunger doesn’t get you, the spread of disease through the village might. All the while you have weekly tax payments to keep up with. It’s a cruel world, but death isn’t game over: even if your character dies, you can go on playing as your own children to carry on the legacy.

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