Such as the mortar being stained from the ingredients being ground down in it. I love the way the game has a lot of little touches. It’s very satisfying to throw ingredients into the mortar and pestle and give it a good bashing. The merchant pays a visit A lot of Little Touches You can barter with the customer to get a good price for your potion or take the price they offer. If you don’t have the particular potion the customer wants they will wait until you brew the potion. You don’t have to go far to see your customer, it’s a click of the screen to the left and there they all are waiting in an orderly line. In between brewing potions you have customers who pay a visit to your shop. Haggle with customers to get the best price You can save the recipe to the recipe book to use again. The more ingredients you add, the further afield your potion goes, passing through experience pathways and effects until you decide you’re done. The ingredients all follow their own unique path on the map. Each ingredient takes the potion in a specific direction. It is a little like taking your potion on an adventure, with a map full of magical effects and dangers, some you want to land on and others you’ll want to avoid. Stirring the potion advances the potion icon along the map which has icons of experience and effects on it for you to earn. You also need to pay attention to the map on the wall as it shows the path the ingredients will take once they are added to the cauldron. Pick the ingredient up and drop them in the cauldron.Īfter adding ingredients into the cauldron you can stir the potion using the spoon by clicking and holding the spoon with the mouse. Then using the mouse and grabbing the pestle you grind the ingredients down. Pick, drag and drop the ingredients you need into the mortar and pestle. You take your ingredients from your inventory on the right of the screen. People appear in your shop with different requirements for potions, and you have to brew said potion and then sell them the result, hopefully making them happy and giving you a nice few coins of gold in return. You can also buy mushrooms and other ingredients from passing tradespeople that stop by your potion shop. First off you collect your herbs and ingredients from the enchanted garden each morning. The difference with Potion Craft is you have to take part in each step of the brewing process it has a physical quality to it. It has never felt that tactile to me as you’re just clicking a button on a controller and the potion is brewed. I’m sure we have all played games that have involved potion making at some point. A customer or two, patiently waiting Lets Brew Discovering recipes to brew for your potion is really down to you to do some experiments and throwing ingredients together to see what brews from it. There is a tutorial to teach you the basics of being a master Alchemist and it explains it all pretty well. So begins your adventure in this click and point game. The story isn’t much but it does lay the groundwork for why you are brewing potions. You decide to take up residence in the house that just so happens to have old alchemy equipment in it. The game begins with a short storyboard, you’re a novice alchemist who happens to come across an old abandoned house on the edge of town. Let us see what concoction we can make! And so the story begins…. Have you ever wanted to brew your own potions? I have and now I’ve had the chance to brew some! Developers Nice Play Games have got together with publishers TinyBuild and released Potion Craft: Alchemist Simulator on Early Access on Steam. Review code used, with many thanks to TINYBUILD Game: Potion Craft: Alchemist Simulator (Early Access)ĭevelopers | Publishers: Nice Play Games | TINYBUILD
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