Font Size
15px

"Farming, gathering, mining, fishing, preparing for festivals, even getting married and having children—most people would probably be confused seeing this list. But what would you think if I told you these are all features within a single ga?"

"You'd probably be just as doubtful as I was when I first encountered this ga. What's fun about that? My real life is already like this—why would I want to experience the sa thing in a ga? It just doesn't make sense."

"Aren't video gas supposed to be filled with fantasy, or flashy action with guns, cars, and sports? What fun is there in an ordinary, everyday life?"

"It's true. At first glance, this content seems incredibly boring. Even The Sims is just a disguised role-playing ga. If I had to do actual farm work, mining, fishing, or gathering, I'd definitely pass."

"But I want to tell everyone reading this review: if you think that way, it's completely normal—but you'd also be missing out on an absolutely brilliant ga. And that ga's na is Stardew Valley."

"This is a ga that looks rough in terms of visuals, has clunky animations, and doesn't leave a strong first impression in any area. But that's just the surface. The real core of this ga will absolutely surprise you. Only by actually playing it can you understand how re-experiencing these everyday tasks can be so enjoyable."

"Farming, gathering, mining, fishing, preparing festivals, even getting married and having children—it's all so similar to real life, yet also very different. In the world of Stardew Valley, you can feel a special kind of warmth. It lets you forget life's worries for a while, just like the letter from the protagonist's grandfather at the start of the ga, hoping his grandchild could find peace of mind. Anyone who's played this ga will understand that feeling..."

Murakami Kazuo racked his brain to co up with every bit of praise he could to complint this ga.

...

...

It was one of the rare gas that truly moved him.

So he willingly promoted it, hoping more people would discover it.

After publishing the review, Murakami Kazuo dove back into the world of Stardew Valley. He was already on his third save file, striving for a perfect playthrough from the very beginning—flawless and optimized.

About two or three days passed after he posted the article, which also marked one full week since the ga's release.

And in just that short week, Stardew Valley had already logged an average playti of over six hours per user on the Battle platform.

For a student or working adult, with roughly 8 hours of work and 8 hours of sleep, that leaves only 8 hours for daily life.

Now this ga was taking up 6 of those 8 hours—nearly 80% of users' free ti. That alone proved how deeply addictive the ga had beco in such a short ti.

And that's not all. After a week of word-of-mouth, the ga had sold 50,000 copies in its first week.

That number might not an much to Gastar Electronic Entertainnt—so of their titles hit a million in the first week. But this ga was different.

It had no marketing halo, looked incredibly rough compared to its contemporaries, wasn't on any major console or handheld platform, and instead launched on the least popular one: PC.

Everything about it scread "unlikely to succeed."

Takayuki had predicted maybe 10,000–20,000 copies in the first week, so hitting 50,000 already exceeded his expectations.

Soon he learned that part of the credit belonged to Murakami Kazuo.

He had essentially beco the ga's number one hype-man, voluntarily writing multiple glowing reviews. If Takayuki didn't know Murakami was a man of principle—and the ga was his own creation—he might have suspected Murakami was being paid to promote it.

With Murakami's recomndation—and his growing popularity—ca a ripple effect, and the 50,000 sales figure quickly made sense.

Naturally, Takayuki didn't let the publicity go to waste.

Seeing Murakami voluntarily beco a one-man PR team, Takayuki officially announced the first-week sales of Stardew Valley under his company's na.

The that Battle was just a StarCraft launcher began to fade, as Stardew Valley climbed to the top of the Battle bestsellers list.

At this stage, Battle was still a very young digital platform, with only StarCraft and Doom as its pillars. No one expected a small, unknown indie title to erge as a dark horse.

Priced at just ¥1,700—cheaper than a decent steak—the only complaint was that it didn't have a physical edition, disappointing so collectors.

But that didn't stop the ga's rising popularity.

Thanks to Murakami's active promotion and Gastar's own push through official channels, more and more people started getting curious about Stardew Valley—especially young professionals in their early 20s who had just entered the workforce.

One of them was a man nad Chiaki Suzuki, who, after trying the ga once, couldn't put it down.

His day job had nearly broken him. ntally exhausted from relentless work, he had fallen into a temporary state of burnout and confusion.

That's when Stardew Valley entered his life.

He was originally a StarCraft player—the kind who wasn't very good but was addicted nonetheless, constantly getting steamrolled by better players.

Losing in competitive gas every day felt no different from being scolded by his boss—after a while, it beca exhausting.

Then he saw Murakami Kazuo's review for Stardew Valley, which awarded it a perfect five-star rating.

A five-star rating—Murakami's first for any ga not made by Gastar. No matter what, Chiaki decided he had to give it a try.

And he too fell head over heels.

But his reaction was a little different than others.

When he started playing, the first thing that ca to mind was his parents back in the countryside.

You are reading Video Game Tycoon in Tokyo Chapter 530: The Dark Horse on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Slime Evolution cover
Similar genre

Slime Evolution

NunuXD ·Game

Lohanlivedhisentirelifeinahospitalbed,needingmachineseventobreathe.ThenonedayhewokeuponaparallelEarth,wherehehadaperfectlyfunctionalbody,butwiththe...

On the Path to the Great Dao cover
Trending now

On the Path to the Great Dao

Pig Nerd ·Action

【Fromtheauthorof''!】Mygrandfatherisverypeculiar.Everyday,helightsincenseforhimselfandeatscandlesinfrontofhisownancestraltablet.Thevillagersareallte...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.