Current:Home > ContactThis Farming Video Game Is So Popular, People Pay To Watch Gamers Play It -WealthTrail Solutions
This Farming Video Game Is So Popular, People Pay To Watch Gamers Play It
View
Date:2025-04-14 01:37:48
One of the joys of video games is the way they let the player experience a new world and do things they would never do in real life — and it turns out that includes the thrill of plowing a soybean field, the excitement of bailing hay and the exhilaration of harvesting wheat.
Harley Hand is getting ready for a day on the farm. "First let me jump in a combine," he says. "We have a soybean harvest, guys. We have a big harvest, a bunch of fields that are ready to go." He makes an adjustment to his equipment, and is on his way: "All right, let's roll."
That sound isn't a real combine, of course, because Hand isn't on a real farm. He is in front of his computer, in his house in rural Hazelhurst, Georgia, playing the game Farming Simulator and streaming the session online. He has more than 40,000 people following him on Facebook. Playing the game is his full time job, with some subscribers paying 5 dollars a month and others giving him tips while he plays. Hand says a lot of his interactions with his audience are about learning the ins and outs of farming. "It's a huge learning experience for a lot of people who come into my streams," he says. "I have got a lot of people who know nothing about farming and they come into the stream, and they're like, 'oh, really? That's how that works.' And it's pretty cool."
Farming Simulator covers a lot of ground, including buying equipment, choosing crops, plowing, planting, fertilizing and harvesting, not to mention options to raise livestock. A.K. Rahming is a gamer and writer who has reviewed Farming Simulator for the website PC Invasion. He says the game is a lot like real farming: "The monotony, the tediousness, the length of time it takes to plow a field in farming sim, it does give you an appreciation for what real farmers have to do, from my experience," he says,
Monotony? Tediousness? Not the kind of words you usually associate with something that people would do for fun. But the game's realism is a big reason why it's so popular. Some of the game's most avid fans are farmers. Wisconsin farmer Ryan Kuster says he can see why some people love the game. "Basically, it's your own little world where you can plan anything and everything that you want. I think this would be really useful for designing farm layouts, even." Kuster says it's real, but not too real. There's no droughts or floods or insect infestations.
Shelbey Walker is an agricultural communications researcher at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. She's studied farmers and video games and has found some farmers use the game as a quintessential busman's holiday: They drive a real tractor all day and unwind by driving a virtual one at night. "The conditions aren't always perfect," she says. "But within the game, the conditions are always perfect. So it's almost like this fantasy, I get to do things in the digital realm that I didn't get to do in real life."
Walker says the game also attracts people like her who may not be farmers, but feel connected to agriculture because they grew up in rural areas or were in 4-H.
And In addition to streamers like Harley Hand, there is another outlet for rabid Farming Simulator fans: an eSports league. It's 2021 Farming Simulator season will end in November with a tournament in Hanover, Germany. The top prize is 100,000 Euros, more than many real farmers make in a year.
This story was edited for radio by Ken Barcus and adapted for the web by Petra Mayer.
veryGood! (118)
Related
- Giants, Lions fined $200K for fights in training camp joint practices
- Chris Evans and His Leading Lady Alba Baptista Match Styles at Pre-Oscars Party
- DC’s Tire-Dumping Epidemic
- States have hodgepodge of cumbersome rules for enforcing sunshine laws
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Coast Guard investigates oil spill spotted in California off Huntington Beach's coast
- Judge rejects Texas lawsuit against immigration policy central to Biden's border strategy
- For years, an Arkansas man walked 5 miles to work. Then hundreds in his community formed a makeshift rideshare service.
- Police remove gator from pool in North Carolina town: Watch video of 'arrest'
- Krystyna Pyszková of Czech Republic crowned in 2024 Miss World pageant
Ranking
- Shilo Sanders' bankruptcy case reaches 'impasse' over NIL information for CU star
- Katie Couric talks colon cancer awareness, breast cancer diagnosis and becoming a grandmother
- For years, an Arkansas man walked 5 miles to work. Then hundreds in his community formed a makeshift rideshare service.
- 2024 starting pitcher rankings: Spencer Strider, Gerrit Cole rule the mound
- Billy Bean was an LGBTQ advocate and one of baseball's great heroes
- Great Barrier Reef undergoing mass coral bleaching event for 5th time in nearly a decade
- D’Angelo Russell scores 44 points in LeBron-less Lakers’ stunning 123-122 win over Bucks
- See Kate Middleton in First Official Photo Since Her Abdominal Surgery
Recommendation
Paris Olympics live updates: Quincy Hall wins 400m thriller; USA women's hoops in action
Da’Vine Joy Randolph wins her first Oscar after being a favorite for her work in ‘The Holdovers’
Chelsea Peretti on her starring role and directorial debut in First Time Female Director
Heidi Klum, Tiffany Haddish and More Stars Stun at the Elton John AIDS Foundation Oscars 2024 Party
Connie Chiume, Black Panther Actress, Dead at 72: Lupita Nyong'o and More Pay Tribute
Behind the scenes with the best picture Oscar nominees ahead of the 2024 Academy Awards ceremony
Shania Twain, Viola Davis, others honored with Barbie dolls for Women's Day, 65th anniversary
Drew Brees announces scholarship for walk-ons in honor of Jason Kelce's retirement