Reviews

Monster Harvest review for Nintendo Switch, PS4/5, Xbox One/Series X

Platform: Nintendo Switch
Also on: PC, PS4, PS5, Xbox One
Publisher: Merge Games
Developer: Maple Powered Games
Medium: Digital/Disc
Players: 1
Online: No
ESRB: E

As I mentioned not too long ago, lately ? and for the first time ever in my life ? I?ve been on a bit of a Pok?mon kick. It started with a clone (albeit a very good clone), but since then I?ve found myself not just giving Pok?mon games a chance, but also really enjoying them.

With that in mind, I was pretty interested in playing Monster Harvest. After all, its big thing is that it?s a cross between a monster-breeding game and a farming sim ? which, itself, is another genre I?ve occasionally been able to get into. The idea of being able to grow plants and turn them into pet monsters is an intriguing one, so I was keen to see how it all turned out.

The short answer: nowhere near as good as you?d hope.

In fairness, the farming part of the game isn?t bad. It?s nothing special, and certainly nothing unique, but it?s at least okay for what it is. You clear the land, you sow your seeds, you water them, you go to bed every night when you exhaust your stamina, and then you repeat the next day. You can also talk to fellow villagers if you want, though none of them offer anything in the way of compelling conversation. All in all, even if it?s nowhere near as zen as, say, Farming Simulator, Monster Harvest is still okay as a, uh, farming simulator.

Where things fall apart is when we get to the ?Monster” part of the equation. For one thing, your monsters aren?t that interesting, and there aren?t very many ? only 72 in total, so you tend to see the same generic-looking blobs over and over again. What?s more, they only have a few, very limited attacks, which means that whenever you encounter another monster during your dungeon-crawling, you?re seeing the same basic animations over and over again in a dull war of attrition.

There?s also the problem of training your monsters. Even when they unlock more powers, we?re still only talking three attacks per monster, so it?s not like there?s some huge variety. Further, leveling up is kind of useless, since it doesn?t refresh your monster?s health ? and since, as I said, every battle is a slow war of attrition, all that means is that you have to go back and rest up regularly, rather than allowing your monsters to get more powerful and healthier the further into a dungeon they get.

It?s a shame that the execution is so bad, since, as I said, there?s a good idea at the core of Monster Harvest. Given that there are plenty of very good monster-breeding games and farming sims out there ? even if not necessarily in the same game ? you?re much better off playing those in tandem rather than suffering through this.

Merge Games provided us with a Monster Harvest Switch code for review purposes.

Grade: C-
Matthew Pollesel

Recent Posts

Sony Interactive Entertainment teams up with Bad Robot Games to produce their first internally developed title

Sony and Bad Robot Games are working on a 4-player co-op shooter under the direction…

7 hours ago

Nintendo eShop Update – Metroid Prime 4: Beyond, Assassin’s Creed Shadows, Red Dead Redemption, MARVEL Cosmic Invasion

There's a very well-rounded selection of new Nintendo eShop titles, content and sales launching today/soon…

8 hours ago

Looks like Megatron has some backup finally as Robosen announced an auto-converting Soundwave

...and it’s backup he can rely on…unlike that sniveling worm Starscream!

9 hours ago

You’ve climbed to the top in Let it Die, now race to the bottom in Let it Die: Inferno!

I’m not looking forward to this game monopolizing my PlayStation recap in 2026…

13 hours ago

The Undertaker joins the Elden Ring Nightreign: The Forsaken Hallows as the second new Nightfarer

Meet the ass-kicking female faith fighter set to launch alongside the Nightreign DLC later this…

2 days ago

This website uses cookies.