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10 Stardew Valley Moments That Hit Harder When You Play Slowly

10 Stardew Valley Moments That Hit Harder When You Play Slowly
10 Stardew Valley Moments That Hit Harder When You Play Slowly

Speedrunning is often the natural state of the veteran Stardew Valley player. Early game restrictions feel like a cage when you know exactly what’s possible, and getting out of that cage as soon as possible is often the goal for those who have done this before. It’s also a challenge to speedrun as fast as possible and satisfying to see how far you can get in as little time as possible.

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As a chronic Stardew Valley speedrunner, I decided to challenge myself to take Stardew Valley slow again in my most recent playthrough. I’ve spent several months on this playthrough now, and I was amazed at how Stardew Valley’s meaningful moments have taken on new meaning. Instead of them being the end goal I had to get to before racing to the next one, they felt like incidental and random special moments.

10 Completing the Community Center

It’s a Big Task and Should Feel Like One

I try to get the Community Center over with as quickly as possible. The features locked behind it are just too valuable to miss out on to keep putting it off, and everything I do in those first weeks of Year 1 is specifically aimed at completing them.

On my slower Stardew Valley run, I decided to approach the Community Center in a different way, and instead focused on building my farm. I donated items when I happened to acquire them, but didn’t specifically forage or grow crops just for the bundles. I didn’t even start ranching until Winter of Year 2. This added some obvious restrictions, and the greenhouse was definitely missed, but when the Community Center was finally completed it felt like a monument to how I had grown and evolved, rather than just a checklist on my way to success.

9 Placing the Last Decoration

Finishing Your Farm is a Major Milestone

Decorating your farm is a massive project and that moment when you finally finish it is always momentous, regardless of how long it took to get there. Speedrunning gets you there faster, but completing a farm is always going to take a while, no matter how fast you’re going.

It’s tricky to know exactly when you’re finished, especially when you aren’t planning it in detail, but often you know it when you place that final decoration. Like the last piece of a puzzle, it all snaps together. Taking my time to decorate my farm gave this moment a gravity I didn’t quite anticipate when I started, and I found myself grateful that I had taken my time in the end.

8 Repairing the Bus

The Freedom to Travel

Stardew Valley has expanded areas, but you’re confined to Pelican Town and its immediate surrounds until you unlock the Bus. The Bus remains unusable until you unlock its bundle at the Community Center or Joja Mart. Unlocking it means unlocking Calico Desert, a new area with vendors, a challenging mine, and access to high-level items.

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For many players, Calico Desert is the first place outside of Stardew Valley that’s accessible. Spending ages in Stardew Valley’s main area then unlocking Calico Desert gives the game a breath of fresh air.

7 Unlocking Skull Cavern

A New Dungeon Crawler

Alongside Calico Desert, Skull Cavern is unlocked with the Bus, and offers a different combat experience to the mines found in Stardew Valley. By the time you’re able to unlock the door leading to the Skull Caverns, you need to have reached level 120 of the mines.

Taking your time with this really makes it feel like an achievement, and even makes reaching the bottom of Skull Cavern more meaningful. It makes it more deliberate and a reason to celebrate rather than one more stepping stone on the path to success. The rare items you get from Skull Cavern also make everything else easier, but getting them after several years feels more profound.

6 Unlocking Ginger Island

Leave End-Game Content for the End

Leaving Ginger Island for the very last minute truly makes it feel like late-game content and makes exploring it more meaningful. Rather than just another place to visit, it feels like a real expansion once you’ve done everything else on the mainland.

This slow, methodical approach lets you complete Stardew Valley in phases, with Pelican Town and its surrounds in the early days, adding Calico Desert once you’re ready, then finally adding in Ginger Island. Deliberately planning when you get access to these spaces makes your playthrough feel more rewarding, and makes you appreciate the late-game content all the more.

5 Getting to Know Linus

Understanding Takes Time

Linus is one of the odd characters of Stardew Valley. He lives in a tent in the mountains, and it’s easy to just assume he’s homeless. As you get to know him, you discover he’s actually living in the wilderness by choice, and strives to be one with nature with as little waste as possible.

Taking your time to build your farm gives you a special connection to the land, and if you do this for several years before you befriend Linus, his heart scenes hit extra hard. He shows you how to craft Wild Bait for fishing, and offers a different perspective on life.

4 Heart Events

The Soul of Stardew Valley

My favorite part of Stardew Valley are the friendships, and they’ve become the gold standard of what’s expected in cozy games. The beginning of a new playthrough can make you feel a bit like an outsider; you’re so obviously the newcomer that it’s hard for Pelican Valley to feel like a community.

However, taking your time with befriending the villagers means that those heart events feel more meaningful. Trust can take time to build, and vanilla Stardew Valley does require a bit of storytelling on your end to create a meaningful relationship. Taking time to get there over several years feels realistic, and makes it feel as though the relationships are more genuine.

3 Meeting Krobus

An Unlikely Friendship

The mystery of the Sewers is introduced as early as Spring Year 1, with Vincent and Jas being scared of something lurking within. This feels sinister, but you can’t actually get access to the Sewers until you donate 60 items to the Museum. Getting the Rusty Key lets you unlock the gate and finally uncover the secret that lurks within.

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The Sewers turns out to be the home of Krobus, a friendly shadow person. You can befriend and even become roommates with Krobus, an event that’s incredibly unusual for both his kind and humans. Befriending Krobus and possibly having him move in with you has more gravity if you take your time discovering him and building your relationship, especially as it’s something that’s unheard of.

2 Getting Married

Embrace the Slowburn

Speedrunning to marriage is reasonable. You get your favorite character living with you, you get to kiss them whenever you want, and they give you things you need, especially early on. Most Stardew Valley players know what they want, and they go and get it.

Like friendships though, waiting a bit and letting the relationship build organically feels more meaningful. There’s something delightful about being rejected by someone at the Flower Dance while knowing that they’ll be marrying you later. Slowburn romances feel more dramatic, and sometimes it’s fun to just embrace that.

1 Reaching Perfection

Perfection Takes Time

Chasing perfection is like the in-game version of Steam achievements. Rather than just getting bragging rights, getting perfection lets you unlock some exclusive content, including items like the Statue of True Perfection that you can showcase on your farm and Golden Chickens.

Perfection takes a long time for anyone to unlock, but it’s made all the sweeter if you’re not starting a playthrough with the sole purpose of getting there. Instead, make it the culmination of years of hard work, or even incidental. Reaching perfection is possible just by engaging with Stardew Valley’s systems, making it the destination of a long journey that has a wonderful story behind it.

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Released
February 26, 2016
ESRB
Everyone 10+ / Fantasy Violence, Mild Blood, Mild Language, Simulated Gambling, Use of Alcohol and Tobacco
Developer(s)
ConcernedApe
Publisher(s)
ConcernedApe
Engine
Proprietary
Cross-Platform Play
Stardew Valley does not currently support crossplay between different consoles and PC

Platform(s)
PlayStation 5, PlayStation 4, PlayStation Vita, Xbox Series X, Xbox Series S, Xbox One, Nintendo Switch 2, Nintendo Switch, PC, Android, iOS
Genre(s)
RPG, Simulation


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