Ranch Simulator: Southwest Ranch & Farm Expansion Pack (DLC)
A new Southwest biome drops desert plains, canyons, and fresh predators into Ranch Simulator. More land, harder survival, same co-op chaos.
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About Ranch Simulator: Southwest Ranch & Farm Expansion Pack (DLC)
Ranch Simulator already asks you to juggle livestock, cash flow, and wildlife threats across a fairly forgiving Northern wilderness. This Southwest Ranch and Farm Expansion Pack, developed by Toxic Dog and published by Excalibur Games, swaps pine forests for arid plains, barren desert stretches, and sprawling canyon terrain. If the base game felt a little too green and comfortable, this DLC is a deliberate difficulty nudge wrapped inside a new biome. From a systems perspective, the expansion introduces what matters most in any good sim expansion: a changed resource loop. Desert environments mean different soil conditions, presumably different crop viability, and a rethinking of how you position your ranch infrastructure. Water management and livestock handling across dry, open terrain are going to create new logistical headaches that the base-game layout never forced you to confront. That kind of constraint is where sim depth actually lives, so the premise is solid on paper. The "deadly new predators" line in the official description is doing real work here. Ranch Simulator already has wildlife pressure, but canyon terrain creates ambush geometry that open fields simply do not. If the AI predator behavior scales appropriately to the new environment, and that is a genuine if, then protecting your animals becomes a more active planning problem rather than a reactive one. Co-op players especially will want to think about patrol splits and how you allocate firearms and defensive structures across a much larger and more exposed property. The multiplayer modes, including online co-op, make this a session game worth coordinating around. The honest caveat is that this DLC arrived with no Steam reviews available and no Metacritic rating at the time of writing. That is not automatically a red flag for a small-studio expansion, but it does mean there is no community verdict on whether the desert systems are fully baked or whether the new predator types are actually threatening versus cosmetically different. Anyone burned by thin expansion content before should probably wait a few weeks for player reports to surface. Ranch Simulator itself has a decent reputation for iterative improvement, so the developer track record gives mild confidence. For the right player, specifically someone who has exhausted the base-game map and wants their routine disrupted, the Southwest setting is a legitimate reason to reinstall. The canyon-and-desert aesthetic is genuinely distinct from what came before, and the cowboy framing gives the whole thing a tonal shift that regular ranch content does not. Newcomers should absolutely start with the base game first. The expansion assumes you already know how the economy and animal systems work, and throwing yourself into a harder biome without that foundation is going to feel punishing rather than challenging. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Toxic Dog
- Publisher
- Excalibur Games
- Release Date
- Feb 17, 2025