Simfarm Mac



For SimFarm on the PC, GameFAQs has 5 cheat codes and secrets.

  1. Farming Simulator For Mac
  2. Sim Farm Mac
  3. Simfarm Mac Os X
  4. Simfarm Manual
Reviewed By: Carole Stewart McDonnell
  • Patience and more patience is what it takes to see the success of crop rotation, growth, production, harvesting, marketing, and selling, but on Sim Farm you can accelerate your crops and make a boom market or a C grade wash out. This interactive game lets you design, build, and produce marketable goods in a rustic acre.
  • Our website provides a free download of Farm Frenzy 2: Pizza Party! Our built-in antivirus scanned this Mac download and rated it as virus free. The actual developer of this Mac application is Alawar Entertainment, Inc. Farm Frenzy 2: Pizza Party! For Mac lies within Games, more precisely Strategy.

SimVOLUNTEER GUEST REVIEWER
GAME TECH INFO
Computer Platform: PC, MAC
Produced by:Maxis
Price Range: $9-29
Learning curve time: 2 hrs.
Age level: 12+
ESRB Rating: Kids to Adults

Genre: Simulation
Christian Rating: 5 of 5
(nothing offensive)
Gameplay: 4 of 5
(good)
Violence: 5 of 5
(none)
Adult Content: 5 of 5
(none)

'SimFarm', a simulation world from Maxis, the makers of “SimCity”, teaches you more than you would want to know about farming. After playing with this game, I felt as if I had been through a year of farming research. I knew why our nation's small farms are dwindling and felt a great deal of compassion for them… but I also knew the typical non-farming teenager would only play this game as a class project or if forced into it. The world of “SimFarm” is much too specialized. No one --except farmers—cares that much about oats, barley, corn and farming equipment.

“SimFarm” presents you land, some money, and tons of options. Can you make a successful farm out of it? Especially as time rolls relentlessly on. Like most Simgames, it's best to read the help section before you start “digging in.” Once you understand the laws of sowing and reaping, regarding the clouds and winds, and being a good shepherd to your flock, you can amass a lot of wealth. Many things are against you: the loan officers, your own inexperience, time, and the many devourers that can destroy your tender plants.

In the end your child's enjoyment of this game depends on how interested they are in farms. Most nomadic and agricultural countries have stories of good and bad shepherds. For urban and suburban Christians in North America, the game brings to life many Biblical stories and many of Jesus's parables: the good sower and the good shepherd become more comprehensible to us. So too does the idea of sowing and reaping, sowing in tears and reaping in joy, the 23rd Psalm and stories of crop-destroying entities. It's a game that teaches us about seed-sowing and the care involved in protecting and bringing seeds to fruition and turning small mustard seeds into large trees that the birds of the air rest in.


Positive—I picked this game up for my girlfriend since she is very much a “country girl” and ended up addicted to it myself. (Yes, she did end up getting the game as a gift… eventually.) Great fun, even if it is not as graphically advanced as SimCity 3K. i>My Ratings: [5/4]
Matthew Beech, age 20

Positive—Being a “farmer's daughter” I really enjoy playing SimFarm. It made me appreciate more how hard my father works to support our family. This game can be really fun and addicting, but only if you're interested in raising crops and livestock year after year. There's nothing really objectional in SimFarm but if you don't feed your animals they will break the fences and escape. If your farm is close to a highway then your livestock quickly turns into roadkill. Feed your animals and this won't happen. SimFarm is fun, I would suggest it for anyone who thinks they would enjoy it. My Ratings: [5/4]
Lori Stanley, age 21

Positive—“SimFarm”, while never quite as popular as it's big “SimCity” brother, does not fail to provide hours of entertainment. I guess it's just the whole idea of running your own farms, keeping livestock, growing crops, etc. that makes this game so appealing. It is relaxing, I've found. This game, like almost every one of the Sim games, has a very good “goof factor.” That is a term my brothers and I coined. It is a scale by which we measure how a player could goof off and destroy himself or his farm. There is nothing morally wrong with the game. It is just simply running a farm. Don't worry, parents. I don't think it's possible to find anything objectionable about this game. By the way, if you are interested in buying this game you might find it in the bargain bin in the electronics department of many stores. My Ratings: [5/4]
Mark Arndt, age 16

Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this Christian Spotlight review are those of the reviewer (both ratings and recommendations), and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Films for Christ or the Christian Answers Network.

Review supplied by Christian Spotlight Guide2Games, a ministry of Films for Christ. Copyright © Films for Christ. Spotlight's URL: http://ChristianSpotlight.com • Mailing address: PO Box 1167, Marysville WA 98270-1167, USA • “Christian Spotlight’s Guide to Games” and “Guide2Games” are service marks of Films for Christ.

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  1. Sim Farm

Sim Farm

DOS - 1993

Also available on: Windows - Mac

4.29 / 5 - 184 votes

Description of Sim Farm

Read Full Review

SimFarm was billed as “SimCity’s Country Cousin”, yet that fails to set expectations. SimFarm simulates running a small farm (which may grow into a big farm) and plays very differently from its SimCity “cousin”.

Where SimCity favored active (but simple) play, zoning and building roads until you ran out of money, SimFarm requires a patient approach. SimFarm has plenty of buttons and levels and a high degree of nuance, but rather than actively building your farmstead, you’ll be spending much of your time planning the planting schedules for fields, choosing which crops to grow, and when to sell harvested crops.

In many ways, SimFarm presages the idle games of today. Much of the game will be spent waiting for crops to mature and be harvested; once harvested, you either sell the harvested crops right away or wait for market prices to improve (while risking further downturns and inevitable deterioration of the harvest). You are able to toggle the game speed to make things go faster, but this is a game which you play in turns both passively and actively. Patience is the key to doing well on your farm.

There are MANY different crops available in SimFarm, each of which is modelled with unique grow-times, susceptibility to pests/weeds/fungus, optimal grow temperatures, water-needs, and storability. Aligning your plantings and grow seasons with weather favorable to your selected crops and planning several seasons of appropriate crops for each field well in advance are key to a profitable farm. The husbandry aspect of SimFarm is less detailed and is more akin to a mini-game than a proper bit of gameplay. For instance, while you can raise cows, you’re not going to be able to set up a dairy farm and make that your primary business. Animals consume resources and eventually reproduce. While selling animals can supplement your income, it’s hard to make your bread & butter, especially since it’s easy to accidentally sell a “mother” before the calf/foal/lamb/piglet depicted in the mouse-over image becomes its own “animal” to be sold. If anything, animals are the most fun for the havoc that they can cause when they get out—if a fence gets blown down, a couple of cows can make pretty short work of a field.

The weak-spot for SimFarm is a lack of documentation. While the in-game help has vital statistics on crops and animals, there’s very little on HOW to do many of the activities you need to perform or schedule to keep your farm running in the black. Though the interface is not unintuitive, it may take some getting used to before you get a handle on what you’re doing. Additionally, the town has a bad habit of shrinking after new developments are voted on and constructed; there’s no indication (that I’ve found) for what causes the town to shrink or how that shrinkage (or growth) is tied to the farm’s performance. It’s usually not a problem, but if you’ve sunk the money into getting a crop-duster, it can be frustrating to find that suddenly the town’s airfield is gone.

SimFarm holds up well, and while there have been many farming games since, few farm sims take as in-depth an approach as this classic. This title may also catch the interest of idle gamers who’ll enjoy exploring this precursor to genre; a bonus for idle-gamers is that emulation will allow you run SimFarm in its own window while you multitask, waiting for your harvests to come in.

Review By P. Alexander

External links

How to play Sim Farm

  1. Download the SimFarms.zip file.
  2. Extract the Zip file to your retro games folder.
  3. Double-click or drag the SimFarm.exe to your DosBox launcher shortcut icon.

Awesome fan site here with guides and everything you'll need : http://www.oocities.org/timessquare/3806/simfarm/

Captures and Snapshots

Comments and reviews

cubano2020-10-020 point

My best friend had the mac/pc hybrid game and brought it over and installed it for me once. I was going to download this game, but the nostalgia and memories of him got to me just seeing the screenshots. He died in 2005. :-(

farmer2020-04-11-3 points

sure used to play this game

cd2020-04-09-2 points

its great

Angelo2018-12-15-6 points

Ottimo gioco

docmarty732017-08-080 point

can anyone get the cheats to work??

katy molko2016-03-300 point

i can save my city, because this game is only a 'democity'.... :(

broady2015-11-01-4 points

Keep yor feey moving or you ass will hit the ground mother rocking disease control

ccc2015-11-010 point

Disease control

Stilz2015-10-23-3 points

opened DOS, not compatible. *sigh*

Farmboy2015-07-092 points DOS version

Memory's of when I was young

Paulo josé2014-11-300 point DOS version

recreate the live in farm you plant coltive and creat the animal´s the milk .... is very fun..

Dino752014-03-18-2 points DOS version

Sweeet!

scarybear2014-02-210 point DOS version

worked fine on Boxer, couldn't be any more happy with this!

Fez2013-11-291 point DOS version

Classic fun game

Simfarmguy2013-04-111 point DOS version

It keeps saying can't open packed script file. Tried using chrome and IE

Simfarm2012-11-26-2 points DOS version

I just get error. Install.exe could not be found

ginariasa2012-10-30-1 point DOS version

its not worked for me

faz2012-10-220 point DOS version

Farming Simulator For Mac

everlasting game

deegan2012-07-070 point DOS version

awesome! i loved this game

Sara2012-04-18-1 point DOS version

SimfarmMac

Wow this is awesome!! Thank you so much, I've been wanting to play this game again for a very long time...I'm so glad you didn't give me a virus like all my other attempts!! LOL Thanks again!

admin2011-05-162 points DOS version

Sim Farm Mac

Changed the game archive, this is now the DOS version, patched and already installed. Thanks for the feedback.

Disgruntled2011-05-130 point DOS version

Issue when installing. error cd or something

Drizzle2011-03-170 point DOS version

Simfarm Mac Os X

Wow, im surprised this game has no attention. this is still one of my favorite old school sim game. i still play it from time to time, and keep wishing someone would make a similar game with more depth.

Simfarm Manual

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DOS Version

Game Extras

Various files to help you run Sim Farm, apply patches, fixes, maps or miscellaneous utilities.

Windows Version

  • Year:1995
  • Publisher:Maxis Software Inc.
  • Developer:Maxis Software Inc.

Mac Version

  • Year:1993
  • Publisher:Maxis Software Inc.
  • Developer:Maxis Software Inc.

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