Suck some slimes with your vacuum pack, bring them back to the farm, set up a corral, feed them food, watch them splurt out splorts, collect those splorts and sell it to the splort market. The main gameplay loop seems to be at first like a farming game. And not just “replace slimes as animals” kind of way, you do get to tend to chickens as well, which some slimes treat as a food source, alongside fruits and veggies. So as you can expect, you do indeed have to take care of a farm. The Slime Rancher games are one of the many, many games in the now-crowded farming game genre. And there’s plenty of slime roaming out and about. There’s a mystery to discover here, but the important thing is the Conservatory is well-equipped to start up a new slime ranch. In Slime Rancher 2, slime wrangler Beatrix LeBeau has completed her adventures in the Far, Far, Range and has now moved into a completely new locale- Rainbow Island. But after looking and comparing the sequel with the first game, harden veterans will find that Slime Rancher 2 really lives up to that Early Access moniker. Slime Rancher 2 even at its current state is already a sublime fun experience. But after this one tweet, I decided that, you know what, let’s see what the fuss is all about and play the sequel, Slime Rancher 2, currently out in Early Access on PC (Steam, Microsoft Store) and Xbox consoles, as well as on Game Pass. Slime Rancher was an indie hit that I know was good, but never bothered picking up for one reason or another.
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