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Courtesy of ConcernedApe
Charming farming
Stardew ValleyYou might have doubts about the desirability of a farming sim, but Stardew Valley mixes in RPG elements with plenty of charm and proves unexpectedly addictive. The cute art style and soft music make for a refreshingly relaxing experience. You have limitless possibilities beyond improving your farm, tending and harvesting crops, and caring for animals. There’s fishing, monsters to slay, quests for the local townsfolk, and even the possibility of a budding romance. A choice of online and split-screen multiplayer allows you to play with friends, and annual updates have steadily expanded the game.
Stardew Valley is a more beautiful world than ours, a world that doesn’t judge you, and getting lost in there for a while can be a great way to relieve stress and anxiety.
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Courtesy of Epic Games
Pop Culture
Fourteen daysWhen Fourteen days appeared, it resembled Valve’s timeless one Team Fortress 2but developer Epic Games pulled in and cited elements from other popular titles Minecraft as a suggestion. then PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds popularized the battle royale genre in which 100 players fight to the death on an island, and Epic quickly came up with the mode that would catapult Fourteen days into the zeitgeist.
Games usually have a specific audience, however Fourteen days is adept at offering something for everyone, with creative and role-playing elements alongside frenetic third-person shooter action. Epic has also deftly fused pop culture by incorporating viral dances, music venues, and crossovers with film and television franchises like war of stars and stranger things. Themed seasons keep things fresh and encourage players to keep coming back for more.
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Courtesy of Creative Assembly
Perfection of strategy
Total War: Warhammer 2The Total War series combines a turn-based map with real-time combat to offer the ultimate strategic challenge. Rome: Total War was the culmination of the historical series and gave you the opportunity to test your skills as a general and fight for the unification of ancient Rome. The historical games spanned many eras and regions, most recently ancient China Three Kingdoms. But the fantasy Warhammer setting frees Total War from its historical shackles and allows for much greater variety in battles, featuring factions and unit types with truly unique playstyles. Owners of the first Warhammer game can play on a mega map that combines the first two games into one truly epic campaign. The excellent Total War: Warhammer III completes the trilogy, and soon we’ll be able to play on a huge map that combines all three.
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