Stardew valley best farm layout11/28/2023 Looks wise I personally do prefer the look of the Forest Farm I can see lot of animals roaming round free-range but that would more suite me than my highly organised and tidy 'father figure'. Will have to go check it out before the game arrives! Thanks.so what is the newer 4 corners one? a little bit of each? and can you only use it if you're gonna be in co-op? Haven't seen a full layout for that one, think the video I saw only offered 4 but I heard there was newer layouts after. Only need 2 with Caroline (easy with Daffodils) and she sends you the recipe: I'm not good at Min/Maxing money as I'm a lazy sod of a Farmer, but I have one moneymaking strategy which has been great this recent playthrough, and all credit goes to Wickedy Chickady's YT channel: The only other option for quick Barn and Coop is to make a lot of money early and just buy the extra Stone and Wood from Robin for the structures, as you need money to build them anyway. The Mine is simply a better option for Stone. You also need Stone for Coop and Barn but the additional stone from the Hilltop Quarry isn't that great and the spawn rates are low. So start with the regular farm, which I think has a larger number of trees spawn on it to start. the Standard Farm and the land-use annoyances of the Hilltop Farm.Īh, but the coup de grace! Neither of these alternate farms are of particular use to your final statement as you don't use Hardwood for Barns or Coops. IMO the Forage spawning feature of the Forest Farm is better than either that Farm's Hardwood or the Hilltop Farm's Quarry, plus I like the darker aesthetic of the Forest Farm vs. I've also played the Hilltop Farm with the Quarry space and again, it was nice but not a meaningful improvement over the Mines. They remain unloved and unchopped and I haven't found that leaving them to lie fallow is helping mushrooms spawn on the Farm any more quickly. However the Forest Farm does get you a slow but constant supply of Hardwood with only one upgrade but that quickly ceases to be a particularly meaningful resource, at least in my current Forest Farm. You need a couple of upgrades to access Hardwood that way but there's just tons of space for Farming. If you're choosing between those two, personally I'd go with the forest farm.įor the first playthrough I recommend the Standard Farm as it's the classic introduction to the game. If you've done that already and are looking for a new experience, that's where the Forest Farm will shine, as well as the Hilltop farm. It's a great map and excellent for first timers. The short version: If it's your first time playing, I'd stick to the standard farm. I apologize that it's unhelpful feedback. That is not at all to say that it's a bad idea, if you haven't played the forest farm before go for it and have fun! I'm just pointing out that it is by no means vital to choose it, the "best" map for massive profits is undoubtedly the standard map, the other maps are designed to offer unique and different play experiences, not substantially more power or profit than you would normally have. As such the forest farm, with less than half the number of tillable tiles as the regular farm, is likely to need significantly less wood, ironically devaluing the very benefit it provides. It's just that most of the reason you'd want Huge amounts of wood (significantly beyond the amount of the map to naturally sustain it) is because of making Huge amounts of Kegs or Preserves Jars, which is warranted if and only if you have large quantities of crops as well space to house all those machines. Plus, excess hardwood can be converted into regular wood, and you otherwise only have a very limited amount of hardwood available per day. However, though you can farm a limitless amount of stone, wood is both needed in significantly higher quantities for most of my farm concepts and far more limited in availability. None of the farm maps offer something Unique which can't be obtained elsewhere. That being said, the same is true of rocks and stone, and wood, to a lesser extent. Certainly not hard enough to base your decision entirely around that, unless you have an idea for a farm concept in mind which requires Absurd quantities of it. Hardwood is not that Hard (pun intended) to get in significant quantities.
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