Forager (video game)

Forager is an open-world adventure game developed by Argentine studio HopFrog[1] and published by Humble Bundle. The game was officially released for Microsoft Windows and Linux in April 2019, later becoming available for PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch, Xbox One, and soon to be on mobile.

Forager
Developer(s)HopFrog
Publisher(s)Humble Bundle
Designer(s)Mariano Cavallero
EngineGameMaker Studio
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows, Linux, PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch
Release
Genre(s)Open-world, Adventure Game, Survival game
Mode(s)Single-player

In Forager, the player progresses by obtaining resources that spawn throughout the world, crafting new buildings, objects, and tools, solving puzzles, and collecting money to buy new lands to explore and utilize.

Gameplay

Forager combines mechanics commonly seen in idle games with those of an adventure or exploration game. [2] With resources that respawn at a very high rate, the player will find themselves able to harvest massive amounts for crafting and leveling, eventually leading to automated systems to collect resources and produce other products and goods.

The leveling system in the game consists of a large grid of unlockable perks, which also may unlock new tools or craftable objects. Everything the player does from harvesting resources, to crafting objects, to killing enemies, has a positive impact on their XP used to advance levels.

The player is able to simulate a variety of tasks related to cooking, economics, engineering, farming, fishing, hunting, magic, manufacturing, mining, and more.

By obtaining money through crafting, skills, looting, and economic tasks, the player is able to purchase more lands to expand their base, explore new areas, and obtain new classes of resources or encounter new enemies and other NPC.

Development

The developer of Forager, Mariano Cavallero, dropped out of school to develop Video Games. For a year he learned how to program Games, unfortunately nobody was interested in his Games at first. After he ran out of money, he moved back home to his mom, who invested her life savings into her sons projects. He started developping Forager in a Game Jam but eventually ran out of money again. Before giving up Mariano participated in one last competition, in which he won a trip to the USA to show of his work. A friend he met at a conference was late to a meeting because he was playing Forager. The person he was meeting had to come look for him, and he showed Forager to this person. This Person was working for Humble Bundle and offered a publishing deal for Forager. A year after release on Steam the Game had sold 600'000 times.[3]

Reception

Reception
Aggregate score
AggregatorScore
MetacriticPC: 78/100[4]
NS: 78/100[5]
Review score
PublicationScore
PC World[6]

Forager received "generally favorable" reviews, according to review aggregator Metacritic.[4]

Nathan Grayson wrote a review on Kotaku calling Forager an "extremely well-made" game and called it "obviously a labor of love" while also noting that the game was "a crafting game stripped down to its very bones" and stating that players may prefer a game with "more than pure progression".[7]

Jeff Ramos on Polygon says that the games repetitive and tedious nature serve to "make the game's bright moments all the brighter" and says that "in Forager, grinding is almost all I have to do, and I can hardly pull myself away" praising the game for its use of grind-heavy mechanics.[8]

References

  1. https://twitter.com/_hopfrog
  2. Peel, Jeremy. "Wot I Think: Forager". Rock Paper Shotgun. Rock Paper Shotgun. Retrieved 16 August 2019.
  3. "Forager on Steam". store.steampowered.com. Retrieved 2020-05-09.
  4. "Forager for PC Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 16 August 2019.
  5. "Forager for Switch Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 16 June 2020.
  6. Dingman, Hayden. "Forager review: Mindlessly mining the minutes away". PCWorld. PCWorld.
  7. Grayson, Nathan. "Forager, Steam's Latest Hit, Is All About The Grind". Kotaku. Kotaku. Retrieved 16 August 2019.
  8. Ramos, Jeff. "Forager has some of the best grinding in a video game, and that's the point - Polygon". Polygon. Polygon. Retrieved 16 August 2019.
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