The patch notes for the big Stardew Valley 1.6 update remain secret, but we do now know one change that's coming thanks to a patch note. Creator Eric Barone shared a wee little insight into the update on Twitter today, and it's got players awfully excited about their fruit trees.
«Started working on the patch notes for 1.6, thought I would share one random line about changes to fruit trees,» Barone tweeted. That change is as follows:
Cutting down a fruit tree now yields the appropriate fruit sapling. If the tree is mature (ie the fruit quality is > basic), it will yield a sapling with the same quality as its fruit. The higher the quality, the faster the sapling will mature when replanted.
It seems like a fairly granular change to me, but the response to the tweet suggests otherwise. There's a lot of excitement, and more than a few questions, which Barone gamely addressed in replies.
For one thing, the change isn't meant to provide any boost over and above what players have now—it's really about preservation. «It's only intended to help people move their trees, not provide any economic benefit,» Barone said in response to one inquiry. «The best money maker would be to plant your tree and never touch it again. This just makes it less of a tragedy if there comes a time that you have to move a tree.»
«The 'maturity' thing is there so that it's less distressing to move an old, established tree, because it will grow back faster,» he said in another reply. New trees that have to be moved will also drop saplings, but without the benefit of the «maturity» bonus.
He also noted that the bonus will not impact the quality of the fruit these trees produce: A sapling from a mature tree will grow faster but still has to go through the same stages in order to start producing the same quality of fruit as its progenitor.
Even with that clarity, the change strikes me as relatively minor, but people who actually play Stardew Valley seem to feel very differently.
«Whomst among us,» etc.
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