Compare Farmer's Life prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by FreeMind S.A.. Published by PlayWay S.A.. Released on 10/20/2023. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Indie, Simulation.

More survival sim than cozy farm, Farmer's Life drops you into post-WW2 Eastern Europe as a broke, alcoholic bachelor with one pig and a collapsing homestead. Respect the grind or get buried by winter.

My first thought loading Farmer's Life was that someone had finally made a farming sim that respects the actual misery of subsistence agriculture. You are Kazimir, a war veteran back on a ruined family farm somewhere in late-1940s Eastern Europe, and the game wastes no time communicating that your situation is genuinely dire. Survival meters for food, water, sleep, and health run constantly, and a badly-timed winter without stockpiled supplies will simply end your run. That tension is real, and for players who like their management loops to have actual stakes, it gives the whole experience a spine that most cozy farm sims simply lack. The systems stack in ways that strategy-minded players will appreciate. Crop management requires watching soil fertility, clearing weeds, and timing harvests against the seasonal calendar. Winter cuts off your fields entirely, so pre-winter stockpiling is not optional. The village economy runs on a reputation layer: NPC tasks and moral choices about Kazimir's drinking directly affect your standing with merchants, which gates access to livestock like cattle, goats, sheep, and horses. You sell at the sawmill, hunt with a rifle for meat and furs, fish, gather wild mushrooms and apples in autumn, and eventually operate farming machines including plows, seeders, mowers, and spreaders. The interconnection between these systems is the genuine strength here. Running out of axe money means no firewood, no firewood means no cooking, no cooking means Kazimir deteriorates before you can plant the spring crop. That chain of consequence is satisfying to manage once you understand it. The weak points are real and worth naming before you commit. The tutorial is thin to the point of being negligent. Plan on roughly an hour of confused early-game fumbling before the resource loops click. The AI NPCs are largely static, the voice acting is intentional gibberish that grates after a few hours, and the visuals sit firmly in the mid-budget range with texture pop-in and some lighting issues. The early game loop, specifically the manual scythe swinging and repetitive material gathering before you unlock better tools, is a genuine slog. Players who need feedback and visible progression in the first thirty minutes will bounce. Patients who treat the opening hours as a setup for a more complex mid-game will find it pays off. Steam user sentiment sits solidly positive across several hundred reviews, which suggests the audience that showed up for this specific flavour of grim survival farming found what it was after. The game launched from Early Access in October 2023 after two years of updates, and the post-launch trajectory has been continued patching plus several DLC packs expanding cottage and activity content. There is no mod ecosystem to speak of and no multiplayer, so what you are buying is a purely solo, story-character-driven experience. The morality system, where you can nudge Kazimir toward sobriety or let him spiral, adds light replay motivation but is not the deep branching narrative a CRPG player would expect. If you want a farming sim with a pulse rate, with meaningful seasonal planning, a reputation economy, and a protagonist whose arc you actually care about fixing, this delivers more than its low price bracket suggests. Just clear your schedule for the first hour and resist the urge to close it when the scythe animation plays for the fortieth time. Diego, Scout Team

Farmer's Life
CasualIndieSimulation

Farmer's Life

Oct 20, 2023FreeMind S.A.PlayWay S.A.
GamerScout Says

More survival sim than cozy farm, Farmer's Life drops you into post-WW2 Eastern Europe as a broke, alcoholic bachelor with one pig and a collapsing homestead. Respect the grind or get buried by winter.

PC
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About Farmer's Life

My first thought loading Farmer's Life was that someone had finally made a farming sim that respects the actual misery of subsistence agriculture. You are Kazimir, a war veteran back on a ruined family farm somewhere in late-1940s Eastern Europe, and the game wastes no time communicating that your situation is genuinely dire. Survival meters for food, water, sleep, and health run constantly, and a badly-timed winter without stockpiled supplies will simply end your run. That tension is real, and for players who like their management loops to have actual stakes, it gives the whole experience a spine that most cozy farm sims simply lack. The systems stack in ways that strategy-minded players will appreciate. Crop management requires watching soil fertility, clearing weeds, and timing harvests against the seasonal calendar. Winter cuts off your fields entirely, so pre-winter stockpiling is not optional. The village economy runs on a reputation layer: NPC tasks and moral choices about Kazimir's drinking directly affect your standing with merchants, which gates access to livestock like cattle, goats, sheep, and horses. You sell at the sawmill, hunt with a rifle for meat and furs, fish, gather wild mushrooms and apples in autumn, and eventually operate farming machines including plows, seeders, mowers, and spreaders. The interconnection between these systems is the genuine strength here. Running out of axe money means no firewood, no firewood means no cooking, no cooking means Kazimir deteriorates before you can plant the spring crop. That chain of consequence is satisfying to manage once you understand it. The weak points are real and worth naming before you commit. The tutorial is thin to the point of being negligent. Plan on roughly an hour of confused early-game fumbling before the resource loops click. The AI NPCs are largely static, the voice acting is intentional gibberish that grates after a few hours, and the visuals sit firmly in the mid-budget range with texture pop-in and some lighting issues. The early game loop, specifically the manual scythe swinging and repetitive material gathering before you unlock better tools, is a genuine slog. Players who need feedback and visible progression in the first thirty minutes will bounce. Patients who treat the opening hours as a setup for a more complex mid-game will find it pays off. Steam user sentiment sits solidly positive across several hundred reviews, which suggests the audience that showed up for this specific flavour of grim survival farming found what it was after. The game launched from Early Access in October 2023 after two years of updates, and the post-launch trajectory has been continued patching plus several DLC packs expanding cottage and activity content. There is no mod ecosystem to speak of and no multiplayer, so what you are buying is a purely solo, story-character-driven experience. The morality system, where you can nudge Kazimir toward sobriety or let him spiral, adds light replay motivation but is not the deep branching narrative a CRPG player would expect. If you want a farming sim with a pulse rate, with meaningful seasonal planning, a reputation economy, and a protagonist whose arc you actually care about fixing, this delivers more than its low price bracket suggests. Just clear your schedule for the first hour and resist the urge to close it when the scythe animation plays for the fortieth time. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Survival FarmingReputation EconomySeasonal StrategyDark TonePost-War SettingMoral ChoicesAnimal HusbandryFirst-Person SimResource Chain Management

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Gold

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 7 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 10
Graphics
NVidia GeForce GTX 750
Processor
Intel Core i5
Sound Card
DirectX compatible

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Memory
16 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 10
Graphics
NVidia GeForce GTX 1060
Processor
Intel Core i7
Sound Card
DirectX compatible

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Game Info

Developer
FreeMind S.A.
Publisher
PlayWay S.A.
Release Date
Oct 20, 2023

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What platforms is Farmer's Life available on?

Farmer's Life is available on PC.

When was Farmer's Life released?

Farmer's Life was released on 20 October 2023.

Who developed Farmer's Life?

Farmer's Life was developed by FreeMind S.A. and published by PlayWay S.A..