Compare Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Actalogic. Published by United Independent Entertainment. Released on 11/6/2013. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Casual, Massively Multiplayer, Simulation, Strategy.

A mid-century tractor fantasy that lands closer to frustration simulator than farming simulator, with a Steam rating of 19% positive to prove it.

My spreadsheet instincts told me to approach this one with hard data before loading it up, and the numbers were not encouraging: 19% positive on Steam across 114 reviews. That rating is not a fluke born of review-bombing or an edgy niche community. It reflects a game that genuinely struggles to function as sold. Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming pitches itself as a period-accurate sandbox set between 1950 and 1970, handing you vintage machinery like John Deere and Lanz Bulldog tractors to work two map regions, an alpine setting and a Tuscany-style landscape. The concept is legitimately interesting, especially for sim fans tired of modern GPS-assisted combines. The execution is a different story entirely. On paper the mechanics have real ambition. The dynamic ground deformation system leaves actual furrows in the dirt as you plow, and those furrows actively affect tractor handling. You have to physically dismount and manually load a seed-drill. Livestock breeding sits alongside crop cultivation, covering more of the farming loop than Farming Simulator traditionally attempts. The time-of-day system even lets you set your own working hours. For a strategy-minded sim player who reads tooltips and enjoys deliberate, slow-burn progression, there is a skeleton of something worthwhile here. The sandbox is pure, with no arcade objectives pulling you away from the grind. The problems start the moment you try to actually play the game. There is no functional in-game tutorial, and the keybinding documentation is famously unreliable, with listed controls failing to match what the game actually recognizes. Finding the hydraulics key, attaching implements correctly, and figuring out where to sell goods all require external guides or raw trial and error. The physics engine compounds every interaction with instability. Equipment flips when approached at odd angles, animals walk through fences, and the multiplayer mode, which supports up to eight players over LAN or internet, turns the physics issues into an outright chaos simulator. The camera angles are poorly designed for road travel, with trees and terrain geometry frequently blocking the view. Crashes are not occasional, they end sessions regularly. From a sim-depth perspective this game sits well below the bar set by the Farming Simulator series, and that series is not exactly celebrated for its tutorial quality either. There is no mod ecosystem to speak of, no post-launch developer support visible in the community, and Steam forum threads from as recently as 2023 are titled things like "I GOT THE GAME TO RUN" as if stability is a personal achievement. The concept of a pre-1970 agricultural sandbox with period-correct machinery and deformable terrain is one I would genuinely want to play, done well. This version was not finished well enough to deliver on that premise reliably. If you have already exhausted Farming Simulator and want something slower and more tactile, and you have the patience of someone who happily cross-references patch notes for fun, you might extract a few hours of stubborn curiosity from this. Everyone else should treat it as a historical artifact of early-2010s budget sim publishing, not a functional game to sink time into today. Diego, Scout Team

Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming
ActionCasualMassively MultiplayerSimulationStrategy

Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming

Nov 6, 2013ActalogicUnited Independent Entertainment
GamerScout Says

A mid-century tractor fantasy that lands closer to frustration simulator than farming simulator, with a Steam rating of 19% positive to prove it.

PC
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming

My spreadsheet instincts told me to approach this one with hard data before loading it up, and the numbers were not encouraging: 19% positive on Steam across 114 reviews. That rating is not a fluke born of review-bombing or an edgy niche community. It reflects a game that genuinely struggles to function as sold. Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming pitches itself as a period-accurate sandbox set between 1950 and 1970, handing you vintage machinery like John Deere and Lanz Bulldog tractors to work two map regions, an alpine setting and a Tuscany-style landscape. The concept is legitimately interesting, especially for sim fans tired of modern GPS-assisted combines. The execution is a different story entirely. On paper the mechanics have real ambition. The dynamic ground deformation system leaves actual furrows in the dirt as you plow, and those furrows actively affect tractor handling. You have to physically dismount and manually load a seed-drill. Livestock breeding sits alongside crop cultivation, covering more of the farming loop than Farming Simulator traditionally attempts. The time-of-day system even lets you set your own working hours. For a strategy-minded sim player who reads tooltips and enjoys deliberate, slow-burn progression, there is a skeleton of something worthwhile here. The sandbox is pure, with no arcade objectives pulling you away from the grind. The problems start the moment you try to actually play the game. There is no functional in-game tutorial, and the keybinding documentation is famously unreliable, with listed controls failing to match what the game actually recognizes. Finding the hydraulics key, attaching implements correctly, and figuring out where to sell goods all require external guides or raw trial and error. The physics engine compounds every interaction with instability. Equipment flips when approached at odd angles, animals walk through fences, and the multiplayer mode, which supports up to eight players over LAN or internet, turns the physics issues into an outright chaos simulator. The camera angles are poorly designed for road travel, with trees and terrain geometry frequently blocking the view. Crashes are not occasional, they end sessions regularly. From a sim-depth perspective this game sits well below the bar set by the Farming Simulator series, and that series is not exactly celebrated for its tutorial quality either. There is no mod ecosystem to speak of, no post-launch developer support visible in the community, and Steam forum threads from as recently as 2023 are titled things like "I GOT THE GAME TO RUN" as if stability is a personal achievement. The concept of a pre-1970 agricultural sandbox with period-correct machinery and deformable terrain is one I would genuinely want to play, done well. This version was not finished well enough to deliver on that premise reliably. If you have already exhausted Farming Simulator and want something slower and more tactile, and you have the patience of someone who happily cross-references patch notes for fun, you might extract a few hours of stubborn curiosity from this. Everyone else should treat it as a historical artifact of early-2010s budget sim publishing, not a functional game to sink time into today. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayercloud-savestier:sub-5Vintage MachineryDeformable TerrainBroken TutorialPhysics IssuesLivestock ManagementNo Helper AILAN MultiplayerBudget Sim

Steam Deck & Linux

ProtonDB Bronze

Runs on Linux but with crashes or issues. Based on 4 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP / 7 / Vista / 8
Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
1300 MB available space
Graphics
Nvidia Geforce 6800GT, ATI Radeon HD 3650
Processor
2,4 GHz Pentium or 100% compatible CPU

Recommended

OS
Windows XP / 7 / Vista / 8 / 10 / 11
Memory
4 GB RAM
Storage
1300 MB available space
Graphics
Nvidia Geforce GTX 560, ATI Radeon HD 6970
Processor
3,0 GHz Pentium or 100% compatible CPU

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming.

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Actalogic
Publisher
United Independent Entertainment
Release Date
Nov 6, 2013

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

Buy smarter: helpful guides

Looking for more? See games like Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming

Frequently asked questions about Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming

How much does Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming cost?

Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock key and store offers across 50+ verified shops, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

Where can I buy Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming cheapest?

Compare Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming available on?

Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming is available on PC.

When was Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming released?

Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming was released on 6 November 2013.

Who developed Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming?

Agricultural Simulator: Historical Farming was developed by Actalogic and published by United Independent Entertainment.