

One of the nice things with the animals in Story of Seasons is that the first animal of each type with the exception (I believe) of the pink rabbit, will be located on your farm where you can tame it for free once you have the necessary building created with materials found around the farm and the required animal care level. These different colored fabrics can be used in conjunction with paints made from flowers or thread and cloth made from one of several types of grass to make clothes. In Story of Seasons, you can create rabbit cloth in three colors: regular, grey, or pink, sheep cloth in either regular or Suffolk, and alpaca cloth in regular or brown. You can create cloth out of one kind of wool in Stardew Valley. There is a much larger variety in the range of wool and cloth crafting. This gives a larger diversity in the products themselves though the variety is lost in crafting because the products don’t distinguish what type of milk they’re made of once they’ve been turned into something. The milk can be cooked with, sold as-is, or turned into cheese, yogurt, or butter. Story of Seasonsfeatures a wider range of animals that create milk products, though the products come out the same regardless whether the milk used is cow, goat, or buffalo. The eggs in Story of Seasons can also be used in cooking, sold, or turned into mayonnaise which isn’t too different from Stardew Valley except that there are more varieties of eggs in Stardew Valley which create a variety of mayonnaise as opposed to the one base kind in Story of Seasons. There is more potential in the materials created with milk, however. These chickens lay eggs that, like all products created on the farm, change in value depending on ranking on a 10-star scale and can also be + eggs which are worth more. Story of Seasons, on the other hand, does not have ducks but features two different kinds of chickens: regular chicken and a silkie chicken. In Stardew Valley, eggs come in regular or large sized and can be used to cook, be sold, or used to make mayonnaise (regular, duck, void, or dino) and milk from cows and goats also comes in large or regular and can be used in cooking, sold, or turned into cheese (regular or goat). There certainly seems to be a larger variety of materials available throughout Story of Seasons: Pioneers of Olive Town. There is a greater variety in animal products and the things that can be done with them. As always, enjoy and feel free to comment below with any comments or suggestions–no one is perfect which means mistakes happen and I’d rather know about them than leave them sitting there!

If you missed it, you can find part one here.

Hello and welcome to part two of my series on the differences between Stardew Valley and Story of Seasons: Pioneers of Olive Town.
