Harvest Moon: Home Sweet Home Special Edition

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Video Chums
5.6 / 10
Cloud Dosage
2.5 / 5
Final Weapon
2.5 / 5
Completexbox
70%
Creators:
Release Date: Oct 30, 2025 - Nintendo Switch, PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S
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Critic Reviews for Harvest Moon: Home Sweet Home Special Edition

Harvest Moon: Home Sweet Home Special Edition is a disappointing farming sim that doesn't do much to keep you coming back. There are many better games out there that deserve your attention including The Winds of Anthos so ignore this and go pick that up. šŸ„

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Harvest Moon: Home Sweet Home Special Edition brings back a classic formula with small improvements, but it never fully recaptures what made the series shine. Farming and daily life are relaxing, yet the slow pacing, stiff animations, and shallow story hold it back. The new inventions help, but they can’t fix the lack of energy in Alba Village. It’s a decent choice for longtime fans seeking a simple routine, but not the revival many hoped for.

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Harvest Moon: Home Sweet Home Special Edition attempts to emulate the success of its predecessors, but so many issues hold it back, including flimsy controls and an unimaginative world. There is hardly any new content added for the special edition, so there isn't much for returning players to check out either.

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Completexbox

Unknown Author
70%
Completexbox

Since Home Sweet Home originally debuted on mobile, there was understandable scepticism about how well it would translate to console. Thankfully, the port to Xbox is handled fairly well. Menus are clean and easy to navigate, and the controller layout feels natural. Farming, fishing, and movement are mapped intuitively to the analog sticks and triggers. While there’s the occasional clunky moment such as struggling to align your character with tiles but it isn’t that much of an issue I found. The UI has been redesigned to suit larger screens for larger font and improved readability. Inventory management remains simple but could benefit from sorting options or quick-access shortcuts. It’s functional, though not particularly modern. If there’s one thing Harvest Moon games have always done well, it’s creating a sense of peace. Home Sweet Home continues that tradition beautifully. The days pass slowly, filled with small goals and targets that reward you with a new crop harvested, a villager returning or being part of a festival. It’s less about adrenaline and more about mindfulness and self-care something we all must practice more often. If you’re the type of player who values atmosphere and comfort over plot twists and headaches, Home Sweet Home can feel like a calming grind you need at the end of a long day.

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