Compare Farming Simulator 22 prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Giants Software. Published by Giants Software. Released on 11/21/2021. Available on PC, Mac, Xbox. Genres: Simulation.

A deceptively deep agricultural sim that rewards patience and spreadsheet thinking, with seasons and production chains finally giving veterans a real reason to plan beyond the next harvest.

I came into Farming Simulator 22 with a mental checklist: does the seasonal system actually change decision-making, or is it cosmetic window dressing? The short answer is that it changes everything, in the best possible way. Where previous entries let you plant and harvest on autopilot, FS22 forces you to think in quarters. Barley goes in the ground in autumn and does not come back until the following summer, which means your cash flow has to survive an extended gap. That gap is where the game lives. You fill it with contract work for neighboring farmers, livestock management, forestry runs, or winery production chains that turn your raw grain into something worth more per pallet. That layered supply chain loop is genuinely the strongest design addition the series has seen in years. For newcomers, the honest truth is that the tutorial will not hold your hand far enough. It covers the basics of hitching a cultivator, driving to a sell point, and banking a first check, but the deeper economy, the crop calendar, the logic of when to buy a bigger tractor versus hire an AI worker, none of that gets explained cleanly. The settings menu is your friend here: seasons can be toggled off entirely, difficulty controls your starting capital, and game day length is adjustable. My recommendation for anyone new to the series is to start on easy with seasons on, set months to a handful of days, and treat the first playthrough as a tutorial the game forgot to provide. Once the loop clicks, scaling up to longer seasons and tighter margins is a genuinely satisfying progression. The production chain mechanic pairs with the seasonal structure to create something approaching a proper economic sim. Processing crops into flour, oil, or animal feed before selling opens price premiums that change the math on which fields are worth buying and which machines are worth the debt. Fleet management matters in a real way: a small tractor straining to pull a heavy seeder on an incline is not just a visual quirk, it is a throughput bottleneck with a dollar sign attached. On the friction side, attaching equipment to tractors can still be finicky, and the waypoint system for locating sell points has not been significantly improved over older entries. Physics edge cases crop up occasionally. These are persistent series issues that remain unresolved. The mod ecosystem is where the long-term value argument gets made. The official in-game ModHub gives everyone access to community content regardless of platform, and the volume of maps, vehicles, and gameplay overhauls available is substantial. Multiplayer co-op, including cross-platform support, is well implemented and arguably the intended mode for sustained play. Assigning roles across a shared farm, one player working contracts while another manages the production line, makes the economy hum in a way that solo play can only approximate. The three launch maps, from a US Midwest setting to a French countryside and an Alpine location, offer enough geographic variety to reward trying all three before reaching for mods. FS22 is not a game that will win over players looking for action or a narrative payoff. What it offers is a slow-burn management loop with enough interconnected systems that optimizing them starts to feel like its own reward. The seasonal and production chain additions make this the entry I would actually recommend as a starting point for the curious, and a meaningful upgrade for series veterans who have been waiting for something to disrupt the routine. Diego, Scout Team

Farming Simulator 22

Farming Simulator 22

Nov 21, 2021Giants Software
GamerScout Says

A deceptively deep agricultural sim that rewards patience and spreadsheet thinking, with seasons and production chains finally giving veterans a real reason to plan beyond the next harvest.

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About Farming Simulator 22

I came into Farming Simulator 22 with a mental checklist: does the seasonal system actually change decision-making, or is it cosmetic window dressing? The short answer is that it changes everything, in the best possible way. Where previous entries let you plant and harvest on autopilot, FS22 forces you to think in quarters. Barley goes in the ground in autumn and does not come back until the following summer, which means your cash flow has to survive an extended gap. That gap is where the game lives. You fill it with contract work for neighboring farmers, livestock management, forestry runs, or winery production chains that turn your raw grain into something worth more per pallet. That layered supply chain loop is genuinely the strongest design addition the series has seen in years. For newcomers, the honest truth is that the tutorial will not hold your hand far enough. It covers the basics of hitching a cultivator, driving to a sell point, and banking a first check, but the deeper economy, the crop calendar, the logic of when to buy a bigger tractor versus hire an AI worker, none of that gets explained cleanly. The settings menu is your friend here: seasons can be toggled off entirely, difficulty controls your starting capital, and game day length is adjustable. My recommendation for anyone new to the series is to start on easy with seasons on, set months to a handful of days, and treat the first playthrough as a tutorial the game forgot to provide. Once the loop clicks, scaling up to longer seasons and tighter margins is a genuinely satisfying progression. The production chain mechanic pairs with the seasonal structure to create something approaching a proper economic sim. Processing crops into flour, oil, or animal feed before selling opens price premiums that change the math on which fields are worth buying and which machines are worth the debt. Fleet management matters in a real way: a small tractor straining to pull a heavy seeder on an incline is not just a visual quirk, it is a throughput bottleneck with a dollar sign attached. On the friction side, attaching equipment to tractors can still be finicky, and the waypoint system for locating sell points has not been significantly improved over older entries. Physics edge cases crop up occasionally. These are persistent series issues that remain unresolved. The mod ecosystem is where the long-term value argument gets made. The official in-game ModHub gives everyone access to community content regardless of platform, and the volume of maps, vehicles, and gameplay overhauls available is substantial. Multiplayer co-op, including cross-platform support, is well implemented and arguably the intended mode for sustained play. Assigning roles across a shared farm, one player working contracts while another manages the production line, makes the economy hum in a way that solo play can only approximate. The three launch maps, from a US Midwest setting to a French countryside and an Alpine location, offer enough geographic variety to reward trying all three before reaching for mods. FS22 is not a game that will win over players looking for action or a narrative payoff. What it offers is a slow-burn management loop with enough interconnected systems that optimizing them starts to feel like its own reward. The seasonal and production chain additions make this the entry I would actually recommend as a starting point for the curious, and a meaningful upgrade for series veterans who have been waiting for something to disrupt the routine.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Tags

Single-playerMulti-playerCo-opOnline Co-opCross-Platform MultiplayerSteam AchievementsFull controller supportSteam Trading CardsSteam CloudRemote Play on TVFamily SharingsteamAgricultural SimSandbox EconomyMod SupportCo-op MultiplayerSeasonal MechanicsFleet ManagementSupply ChainOpen World SandboxProduction ChainsCrop CalendarWorker AutomationContract JobsAnimal HusbandryForestryModHub IntegrationEconomic SimCross-Platform Co-op

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 Home (x64)
Processor
Intel Core i5-3330 or AMD FX-8320 or better
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
GeForce GTX 660 or AMD Radeon R7 265 or better (min 2GB VRAM)
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
35 GB available spac…

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 Home (x64)
Processor
Intel Core i5-5675C or AMD Ryzen 5 1600 or better
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
GeForce GTX 1060 or Radeon RX 570 or be…

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
93%(91,054)

Game Info

Developer
Giants Software
Publisher
Giants Software
Release Date
Nov 21, 2021

Game Modes

singleplayer
multiplayer
coop
online coop
Online Co-op

Languages

Subtitles (23)
EnglishFrenchItalianGermanSpanish - SpainCzech+17 more

Features

AchievementsController SupportCloud Saves

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Frequently asked questions about Farming Simulator 22

How much does Farming Simulator 22 cost?

Farming Simulator 22 pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

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What platforms is Farming Simulator 22 available on?

Farming Simulator 22 is available on PC, Mac, Xbox.

When was Farming Simulator 22 released?

Farming Simulator 22 was released on 21 November 2021.

Who developed Farming Simulator 22?

Farming Simulator 22 was developed by Giants Software.