Compare Everdream Valley prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Mooneaters. Published by Untold Tales. Released on 5/30/2023. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie.

A cozy farm-and-dream adventure where you tend crops by day and slip into animal dreams by night. Charming but uneven.

Everdream Valley is a farming and exploration game from Mooneaters that splits its time between two distinct modes: managing a rural property during daylight hours and, once you sleep, inhabiting the dreams of the farm animals around you. That second half is the hook that sets it apart from the crowded cozy-farming pile. You are not just watering crops and feeding chickens. You are becoming the chicken, then the dog, then something wilder, moving through dream-soaked versions of the valley that feel softly surreal, like a children's illustrated book left out in the rain just long enough to blur the edges. The hand-crafted world has genuine warmth to it. Mooneaters clearly cared about the visual language here. The environments are lush and layered, the animal animations carry personality, and the soundtrack leans into that slightly mystical, unhurried register that good ambient folk scoring does so well. There are quiet moments in the dream sequences where the sound design alone justifies putting on headphones. If you are the kind of player who lingers in a space just to hear what it sounds like, Everdream Valley rewards that patience. The farming side is functional but thin. Crop loops, basic tool upgrades, and light resource gathering are all present, but none of it reaches the depth of dedicated genre entries. That is not necessarily a fatal flaw - this game is clearly not trying to out-simulate Stardew Valley. It is aiming for something more impressionistic. The problem is that the daylight half sometimes feels like busywork you endure to unlock the dream segments you actually came for. The pacing is slow even by cozy-game standards, and the early hours in particular can feel directionless. There is a version of a player who loves that looseness. There is another version who bounces off it before the dream mechanic has properly opened up. The mixed Steam reception (sitting around 71 percent positive) reflects a real split in audience expectations. Players who arrived wanting a richly systemic farming sim left frustrated. Players who leaned into the mood, the animal-possession sequences, and the gentle mystery of the valley's backstory found something quietly memorable. The game is roughly six to eight hours depending on how much you explore, and it does mostly know when to end - the pacing issues are front-loaded, and the final dream sequences carry enough emotional weight to feel like a proper resolution rather than a fade-out. Everdream Valley is best understood as a mood piece with farming trappings, not a farming game with a mood-piece side quest. If you have a tolerance for a slow first act and you respond to games that prioritize atmosphere over systems, there is something genuinely worth experiencing here. If you need mechanical depth or progression hooks to stay engaged, this one will likely feel insubstantial before it earns your patience. Kai, Scout Team

Everdream Valley
AdventureCasualIndie

Everdream Valley

May 30, 2023MooneatersUntold Tales
GamerScout Says

A cozy farm-and-dream adventure where you tend crops by day and slip into animal dreams by night. Charming but uneven.

PC
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About Everdream Valley

Everdream Valley is a farming and exploration game from Mooneaters that splits its time between two distinct modes: managing a rural property during daylight hours and, once you sleep, inhabiting the dreams of the farm animals around you. That second half is the hook that sets it apart from the crowded cozy-farming pile. You are not just watering crops and feeding chickens. You are becoming the chicken, then the dog, then something wilder, moving through dream-soaked versions of the valley that feel softly surreal, like a children's illustrated book left out in the rain just long enough to blur the edges. The hand-crafted world has genuine warmth to it. Mooneaters clearly cared about the visual language here. The environments are lush and layered, the animal animations carry personality, and the soundtrack leans into that slightly mystical, unhurried register that good ambient folk scoring does so well. There are quiet moments in the dream sequences where the sound design alone justifies putting on headphones. If you are the kind of player who lingers in a space just to hear what it sounds like, Everdream Valley rewards that patience. The farming side is functional but thin. Crop loops, basic tool upgrades, and light resource gathering are all present, but none of it reaches the depth of dedicated genre entries. That is not necessarily a fatal flaw - this game is clearly not trying to out-simulate Stardew Valley. It is aiming for something more impressionistic. The problem is that the daylight half sometimes feels like busywork you endure to unlock the dream segments you actually came for. The pacing is slow even by cozy-game standards, and the early hours in particular can feel directionless. There is a version of a player who loves that looseness. There is another version who bounces off it before the dream mechanic has properly opened up. The mixed Steam reception (sitting around 71 percent positive) reflects a real split in audience expectations. Players who arrived wanting a richly systemic farming sim left frustrated. Players who leaned into the mood, the animal-possession sequences, and the gentle mystery of the valley's backstory found something quietly memorable. The game is roughly six to eight hours depending on how much you explore, and it does mostly know when to end - the pacing issues are front-loaded, and the final dream sequences carry enough emotional weight to feel like a proper resolution rather than a fade-out. Everdream Valley is best understood as a mood piece with farming trappings, not a farming game with a mood-piece side quest. If you have a tolerance for a slow first act and you respond to games that prioritize atmosphere over systems, there is something genuinely worth experiencing here. If you need mechanical depth or progression hooks to stay engaged, this one will likely feel insubstantial before it earns your patience. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

steamCozyFarming SimAnimal MechanicsDream SequencesAtmosphericSlow BurnExplorationShort Playtime

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
71%(952)

Game Info

Developer
Mooneaters
Publisher
Untold Tales
Release Date
May 30, 2023

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