Normally in games where you inherit a farm or plant shop or garden from an elderly relative, you conveniently have enough of a green thumb to keep that farm or plant shop or garden alive and thriving. (At least until winter.) Not so in Greenheart Necromancer, a game in which your thumb is only green when it's got a bit of rotting flesh on it, because you are, as the name suggests, a necromancer.
This upcoming game from indie studio Silverstring Media reframes the idea that letting the azaleas die is a 'bad thing' by giving you the ability to bring them back to life, and make them even better the second time.
As the Steam page puts it, «Grow your plants' levels to unlock special traits and increase their yields through a cycle of life and undeath and resurrection».
Having a thriving undead balcony garden will let you attract ghost bees, which provide mystical honey you can then sell at the market.
Casting spells will help your plants grow, change their likes and dislikes, and protect them from pests, but you won't have to keep an eye on them all day long.