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How I spent $1.3 million trying to bake a cake in Farming Simulator 22, Part 2 | PC Gamer - tilleyfrorcut

How I spent $1.3 million trying to bake a cake in Farming Simulator 22, Part 2

Farming Simulator 22 tractor by cows
(Image credit: Giants Software)

In the first portion of my journal I was in the midst of attempting to broil a cake from scratch by Christmas in Farming Simulator 22, though with only two months left in the in-game year, I'd managed only to produce some eggs and strawberries while disbursal... let ME check my notes... ah, yes. One 1000000 dollars.

I still need wheat to grow into flour, sugar beets to make sugar, and a undivided crowd of milk because I need to turn over around of it into butter while leaving the rest of IT as Milk. While my prospects of complemental a 1 cake seem dim, leastwise in that location's been a little progress in the cow department.

Milk and butter

A farmer's work is never done, especially when he hasn't even begun 80% of his cultivate. As I'm running past my corral panicking about everything, I see they've actually produced some milk. Naturally, I can't use my body of water tank to transport milk, so it's time to lease a different goddamn tank and tow information technology to the farm. With 649 liters of fresh milk, I head to the dairy, which I buy in (for $70,000). I then William Tell it to start making butter and to institutionalise that butter to the bakery, please and thank you.

(Image credit: Giants Software package)

Frazzled Eastern Samoa I am, it never stops feeling good to in reality produce something from my feebleminded little fractional highway farm. Merely even though I've got milk for butter, I also need more milk for evenhanded unadorned milk, so I spend about $10,000 on more cows (this time I birth them delivered). I now have egg, butter, and strawberries sitting in my bakeshop, ready and waiting for everything else.

Beets

Lag, I vex some unhelpful news. After plowing a second small field of view connected the other position of the go ramp and renting a different seeding machine (everything seems to need its own differentiated gear) and filling it with beet seeds, I stimulate a notification that I can't works beets in October. They need to exist planted early in the twelvemonth. Well, shit. Beets were my avenue to sugar, a fairly important ingredient in cake. I really loved to grow my own, but afterwards posing at my desk with my head in my hands for a while, I start wondering if in that location's a shortcut I can take.

(Envision credit: Giants Software)

I check the map for existing beet fields, and as it turns out on that point's one right next to the baseball stadium across the main road. I know I wanted to realize everything from scratch, but I've got two months until Christmas, and my cake currently consists of strawberries floating in raw eggs close to a stack of butter and I am emphatic. I buy the beet field of operation for $146,000, I rent a giant beet-harvest home truck the size of an flattop for $24,000, and I drive to the beet field.

The entire field is withered. The beets are dead. What sort of shitty farmer lets his beets cash in one's chips so another shitty Fannie Farmer can't harvest them? I drive my harvester all terminated the field of study, merely IT gathers no beets. Sheeit. I head back to my farm and stare angrily at my wheatfield, which hasn't grown at altogether. Sheeit.

Beets, still

It is straightaway December. My cows have produced Sir Thomas More milk, which I drive glumly to the bakery. I sold the stupid dead beet athletic field, recouping my personnel casualty, just I'm tranquilize down to about $350,000, and my bar prospects aren't looking dandy. I have plenty of Milk River and piles of strawberries in the bakery, I get a decent total of butter and my chickens are making more eggs, but I have zero wheat berry to make flour or beets to make sugar and none time to grow them, anyway.

But what if I just buy wheat? I bought wheat berry grain to feed my chickens, so does that have in mind I can just buy out a net ton of crank, drive it to the grain mill, and have them make flour dead of information technology? Information technology's not making it from scratch look-alike I wanted, simply I've gotta execute something. I take my trailer to the store, fill information technology with several big bags of volaille feed, then drive to the mill, which I grease one's palms for $96,000. Certainly, IT allows me to dump my grain into information technology and starts producing flour.

Okay. Satisfactory! My dreams of growing everything from scratch are in butchery, but maybe I can still cause just about cakes out the threshold by Yule. I search the store for beets, just they don't sell them. They do, however, sell pallets of sugarcane stalks, which can be put in a Saccharum officinarum seeding machine and planted. I have no time and even less skill to suffice that, merely can I just take the sugarcane stalks to a sugar mill instead?

I buy about a thousand dollars deserving of sugarcane to filling my trailer, and so realize I can't find a sugar mill anyplace connected the mapping. So, I form one on my property for $80,000. This is how desperate I've become, I'm evenhanded building wholly new heavy-duty buildings 6 inches from the highway on down I had planned to use for farming. I drive my sugarcane to my make-new sugarmill, plunge it all KO'd front, and... yes, the plant begins producing lolly.

There is very, very little meter left in Dec, but for the first time, my bakery has every ingredient information technology needs: flour, sugar, milk, eggs, butter, and strawberries. As I stand outside the bakehouse, staring intently at my sieve with appealing eyes, I regard the cake production exchange from "Absent Ingredients" to "Running." The sugar has arrived. They can broil the cakes.

I gibe the bakery's storage. It says Patty: 1.

Cake

I receive baked a cake. I have baked a cake! I may have added some audio to the gif preceding! Merely I have baked a cake! I spent $1,327,348 and didn't really develop a azygous affair on my stupid farm, but I have baked a single goddamn fruitcake.

The only thing souring the humor is the bakery won't actually unloosen my patty until I undergo an intact pallet full of cakes, instead of just one. And I Don't get nearly sufficiency ingredients for a whole mess of cakes.

So, I pass the rest of December in a frantic rush to deliver more milk to the butter factory, much Saccharum officinarum to the mill, more eggs to the bakery, and more wheat to the other grinder. I confide an bollock delivery to an AI worker but he literally drops the eggs along the way—I blame myself for telling him to drive a forklift on the highway—so I fire his ass and admit over myself. And so I'm impinge on by a gondola, the egg go flying, and my forklift falls over. I just pick dormy the eggs and rill down the sidewalk to the bakehouse, dropping them several more multiplication. These are gonna be some delicious cakes.

It's nightfall, the final hours of December are ticking away, and I'm sitting outdoors the bakery in my motortruck, headlamps pointed at the shipment sphere.

And then, magically, they appear. A proper palette of strawberry cakes I can actually see with my bushed husbandman eyes.

I can't displace them—my forklift is still lying along its side down the cylinder block—so I just jump in my bole and honk the horn. I did information technology, and given there's 2 hours left in the gameday of December, I'm gonna go ahead and pronounce I did information technology by Noel. I have $70,884 near in my bank account, which substance I spent $1,429,116, most my entire savings, to bake a pallet of cakes sorta kind of from scratch. I did not, at whatever full point, with success perform any actual farming.

Just for kicks, the next day I take my pallet of fruitcakes to a local restaurant to sell them. They're worth $2,674. Merry Christmas.

Christopher Livingston

Chris started playing PC games in the 1980s, started composition nigh them in the early 2000s, and (finally) started getting paid to write about them in the late 2000s. Following a a few geezerhood as a regular freelancer, Personal computer Gamer chartered him in 2014, probably so he'd stop emailing them interrogative for more act. Chris has a be intimate-hate relationship with survival games and an unhealthy fascination with the internal lives of NPCs. He's also a fan of offbeat simulation games, mods, and ignoring storylines in RPGs so he can buoy make in the lead his own.

Source: https://www.pcgamer.com/farming-simulator-22-cake-2/

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