Harvest Moon DS: Island of Happiness

Harvest Moon DS: Island of Happiness
Developer(s) Marvelous Interactive
Publisher(s)
Distributor(s) Ubisoft
Producer(s) Hikaru Nakano
Artist(s) Igusa Matsuyama
Composer(s) Noriko Ishida
Eri Yasuda
Yousuke Agou
Series Story of Seasons
Platform(s) Nintendo DS
Release date(s)
  • JP February 1, 2007
  • NA August 26, 2008
  • EU December 12, 2008
  • AUS March 26, 2009
Genre(s) Simulation
Mode(s) Single player

Harvest Moon DS: Island of Happiness (牧場物語 キミと育つ島 Bokujō Monogatari: Kimi to Sodatsu Shima, lit. Farm Story: The Island Grows With You) is a farm simulation video game published and developed by Marvelous Interactive Inc. in Japan, and released in North America by Natsume exclusively for the Nintendo DS. It is the third installment of the Harvest Moon series on the DS.

Gameplay

Animals

Livestock includes cows, chickens, and sheep, which produce milk, eggs, and wool respectively. Work animals include a dog and horse, which can be acquired after meeting certain criteria. The dog protects livestock, and the horse can be ridden and used for farm work.

Marriage

As in other games in the Harvest Moon series, Island of Happiness offers players a chance to marry. Marriage is only possible once you have met everyone in the game. If playing as a boy, there are six bachelorettes to choose from: Natalie, Witch Princess, Julia, Lanna, Sabrina, and Chelsea. Playing as a girl, there are also six eligible bachelors: Vaughn, Denny, Shea, Pierre, Elliot, and Mark. The couple can also have a child, after a month of marriage. This child progresses only so far as to begin to crawl, toddle, and speak.

Story

In the beginning, the player (playing either as the male character, Mark, or the female character, Chelsea) is shipwrecked with a family of four and end up on a deserted island. There seems to be signs of past life on the island, but no one knows what happened. By farming, the player will attract new villagers (much like Harvest Moon: Magical Melody), who provide ranching or agricultural services.

Development

The American pre-order bonus was a limited edition plush chicken that was included with the game when ordered from participating retailers.

Reception

Nintendo Power gave Island of Happiness a score of 7.0/10.0, which is higher than Harvest Moon DS's score of 6.0. They said that the use of the stylus was not very innovative and that traveling was slow. Earlier in the review they mentioned how much work and trouble it is for the simplest of tasks. GameSpot's average critic score is 7.0/10.0 as well.[1] Hyper's Tracey Lien commends the game for bringing "back the addictive elements from previous games". But she criticises the "clumsy control system that makes even the most basic of tasks feel like a chore".[2]

References

  1. "Harvest Moon DS: Island of Happiness". Gamespot. Retrieved October 28, 2011.
  2. Lien, Tracey (June 2009). "Harvest Moon: Island of Happiness". Hyper (Next Media) (188): 44.

External links

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