Harvest Moon: Mad Dash Image
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  • Summary: Go solo or take along a few friends in this fast-paced farming frenzy!
    Harvest, fish, milk, and more as you fulfill orders to complete each level, but watch out for molten lava, raging boars, and other obstacles!
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  1. Sep 15, 2020
    50
    On one hand, it is an absolute joy to finally have Harvest Moon on the Xbox. But, Harvest Moon: Mad Dash on Xbox One isn’t the version that many fans will have been hoping for. Whilst it isn’t without its charm, it doesn’t represent Harvest Moon in the right way: Mad Dash is designed to be played in short, sharp bursts, whereas the real thing can easily suck days and weeks away.
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  1. Sep 14, 2020
    6
    HArvest Moon: Mad Dash - so when I was growing up, Natsume was up there with the best of them. Harvest Moon: Friends of Mineral Town providedHArvest Moon: Mad Dash - so when I was growing up, Natsume was up there with the best of them. Harvest Moon: Friends of Mineral Town provided hundreds of hours worth of gameplay for my friends and me through its upbeat nature and endless possibilities. For us, it was about so much more than that, though. It brought us together as we set out to achieve a common goal. We found ourselves designing layouts for our farm on bits of paper at school, to having business meetings where we decided our yearly financial goals: strategy and creativity were in abundance. Fast forward some twenty years, and there is a lack of evidence to suggest that Natsume Inc. are close to recapturing the former glory of the Harvest Moon series. Many of the games just haven’t hit the mark, even though they are all built on the same premise. The same can be said for their latest venture, Harvest Moon: Mad Dash, which is a unique twist on the formula that still fails to capture that magic that made the early titles so endearing. Gone is the long and detailed introduction into how you inherited your farm and all that must be done to restore it. Instead, after a short series of screenshots introducing the town and the sprites, you are presented with a map. Any immediate concerns that this has all the makings of a mobile game are justified, as this looks, sounds, feels and plays as though it has spent a couple of years on the iOS store and the Nintendo Switch seemed the logical next step for a quick buck, heck let's throw it on Xbox and all the consoles to scape up some cash. The idea behind Harvest Moon: Mad Dash is that as a timer runs down, you must dash between crops to pick them up using A and set them down next to each other – again, using A. In doing so, the crops become bigger and once enough have been placed near to one another, you can harvest them using B. The left and right bumpers are used to rotate the crops to fit neatly with the others – sharing similarities to Tetris and harvesting the crops yields points. The aim of the game is to receive enough points to achieve the elusive three stars – mobile port, anyone? As the levels progress, the number of crops on screen grows, as does the size and shape of the obstacles in the way. Animals may charge from one side of the screen to the other, or parts of the map make the land unavailable for planting. You may also be asked to complete an ‘order box’ where you harvest the crops to get extra points. After a period of success, you unlock ‘Power Mode’ whereby the crops grow at a quicker rate and are instantly ripe for harvesting. It stops time and offers a great way to earn points quickly. While it shares some similarities with the likes of Overcooked for its fast-paced, local multiplayer action, this is where the comparisons end. Harvest Moon: Mad Dash is far from exciting and has a short shelf-life. Even those oh-so-helpful sprites from the games of old sharing their ‘Earth energy’ to turn things up a notch don’t detract from its unenjoyable gameplay. A lot has been done to ensure that progression across the levels is evident, and it does ramp up the action more with each new initiative that is introduced. That being said, it isn’t enough to draw you back in time and time again. So in conclusion, if my former self could see me playing this Harvest Moon title now, I would be shaking my head in disappointment at just how bad the fall from grace has been. This game isn't far stretched from a pure cash grab so let's hope some more of the classic formula comes packed into the next titles for Xbox One. Expand