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Farming Simulator 20 (Nintendo Switch)

  • Based on 833 reviews
Condition: New
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Availability: Only 6 left in stock, order soon!
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Arrives Sunday, Jan 12
Order within 2 hours and 27 minutes
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Features

  • Use and drive over 100 faithfully reproduced farming vehicles and tools including, for the first time on Nintendo Switch, the largest agriculture machinery Company in the world: John deere
  • tend to your livestock, including pigs, cows, sheep, and horses
  • ride your own horses and explore the vast areas offered in a new North American open world loaded with farming activities

Description

In farming Simulator 20, take control of vehicles and machines faithfully recreated from leading brands in the industry. For the first time on Nintendo Switch, This includes John deere, the largest agriculture machinery company in the world. Drive other famous farming brands such as case IH, new Holland, Challenger, Fendt, Valtra, Krone, Deutz-Fahr and many more. Farming Simulator 20 features a new North American environment in which to develop and expand your farm. Enjoy many exciting farming activities, including new machinery and crops with cotton and oats, new to the Nintendo Switch! Tend to your livestock of pigs, cows, and sheep, and now ride your own horses, letting you explore the vast land around your farm in a brand new way. Set Contains: Cartridge

Release date: December 3, 2019


Product Dimensions: 7.87 x 5.51 x 0.79 inches; 1.76 ounces


Type of item: Video Game


Item model number: FHIA21.UK.45ST


Item Weight: 1.76 ounces


Manufacturer: Focus Home Interactive


Date First Available: September 5, 2019


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Sunday, Jan 12

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Leasing options through Acima may also be available during checkout.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Perfect
Fast shipping at Christmas time was appreciated!!
Reviewed in the United States on January 21, 2023 by Tracy Mongold

  • Everything went great
Good product, fast delivery, everything was just as it should be.
Reviewed in the United States on December 12, 2022 by Heather

  • Yes
My grandson loves the game
Reviewed in the United States on August 9, 2021 by RITA S.

  • It’s a switch game.
Very basic, bought for my son,. He said it’s just like the other one. He was happy to get it but felt indifferent once playing it. Made me feel disappointed for him also
Reviewed in the United States on March 9, 2023 by Kiki Martin

  • Upset customer
The game was all scratched when my son open the game up he is a nine year autistic child and that breaks my heart to see him hurt
Reviewed in the United States on March 21, 2021 by Unknown

  • DON'T BUY THIS ONE BUY THE PREVIOUS EDITION
Let’s just come right out and say it, shall we? This is not your father’s Farming Simulator – it’s your toddler’s. This is just a slimmed-down, bare-bones, streamlined reduction of the great “Farming Simulator for Switch.” This new edition is so anemic it comes across as “Farming Simulator Lite,” a training-wheels version suitable for kindergartners who aren’t yet ready to graduate to the real game. When I say the real game, I mean “Farming Simulator for Switch” (aka “FS17” because it is based on a port of Farming Simulator 17 whereas this one, “FS20”, is a port of Farming Simulator 20). I could probably write a 200-page book on all the ways this FS20 edition is inferior to the original Switch FS17 edition, starting with the fact that this edition has much cruder graphics and a very garish color palette. The shrubs and bushes are splotchy impressionist art, the crop icons are chunkier and less refined, and the vehicle resolution is quite fuzzy compared to the photo-realistic vehicles in FS17. All that alone is bad enough, but the real crime here is all the things you can’t do in FS20 that you could do in the original FS17. For example: -- You can’t choose your farmer’s gender anymore, you have to be the male -- The Tutorial is gone. There is a “Help” menu but it’s actually not helpful, it only tells you about a third of what you need to know if you’ve never played FS before. -- You can’t change the game speed anymore. Daylight lasts about 30 minutes of real time and night lasts about 10 minutes of real time, which is equivalent to the FS17 speed setting of “x30.” (FS17’s game speed could be adjusted from x1 to x120, with four other settings in-between.) This is a problem because it means you have to wait out a full rainstorm, you can’t fast-forward through it, and since you can’t harvest in the rain that means you’re just sitting there waiting for the game to let you do something, and most rainstorms last for a full (30-minute) day. There is also no in-game clock to let you know when night is coming. -- Speaking of rainstorms, there is no weather forecast. There’s no way to plan ahead when it will rain. -- There’s no chicken coop which means no selling eggs, you can’t do any logging for money, you can’t place beehives or greenhouses or solar panels or wind turbines, you can’t take out bank loans, and there are no other farmers in the game for you to do missions for. In other words, every single FS17 method of earning supplemental income is missing here, which makes it much harder in FS20 to accumulate funds. -- And because you can’t do missions, you can’t lower the asking price of the surrounding fields, and the ones in FS20 are prohibitively expensive ($100k to $500k each, whereas in FS17 you could get many field prices down to the $35k-$145k range after doing enough missions). There are only 10 fields you can buy in addition to your starting three; FS17 had either 31 or 36 fields to buy depending on which location you were in. -- You can’t lease vehicles in FS20, you must buy them outright. And you can no longer repaint any vehicles either. -- There is no traffic in this edition, and no pedestrians. -- There are only 5 selling stations, whereas FS17 had twice that many. -- Milk no longer auto-sells for you, you must collect it in a special tanker and deliver it to, of all places, a grain chute (!?) -- You can’t buy a bigger header for your harvester, you have to get a bigger harvester, and this game only comes with 3 harvesters, whereas FS17 had 10. You’ll need about $350k to be able to afford the mid-range harvester and then another $550k to afford the third and final harvester. -- Harvesters no longer have cruise control, and you can’t extend their pipes out by yourself, it will only extend in the presence of a trailer (and you have to line it up JUST RIGHT to get it to extend). -- There’s no power washer, instead you have to pay to wash your vehicles at the Car Wash. -- Your harvesters and trailers no longer have number values of their contents, just an orange fill bar. -- The shop no longer displays descriptions of each item, instead you have to push down on the R knob on each one to read its description. -- There is no separate save feature, instead the game constantly auto-saves whenever you try to open the map view or the options menu, which gets very irritating since it auto-saves far more often than it really needs to. -- There are only four “settings” you can adjust (music volume, sound FX volume, “accelerometer steering” and “horizon tilt”) whereas in FS17 there were over 30 player-adjustable settings, which included money units, measuring units, radio stations, volumes (vehicles/radio/environment), traffic levels, dirt build-up, fuel usage, plant growth, withering rates, etc. -- The FS20 vehicle shop has 22 categories, whereas FS17 had 40 categories. -- Weirdest of all, you can’t get out and walk around anymore, you can only teleport from one vehicle to the next. And when you do, the game doesn’t tell you which vehicle it is, so it’s hard to keep track of which is which when you need to sell or reset one of them. In addition to all of the above, this edition also has its own new problems and glitches that are specific to this edition: -- In this edition you have to specify which color scheme of animal you are purchasing, which is fine except that the game will then proceed to display them incorrectly. If you buy a certain color of horse/cow then when you leave and come back, the game animates them as having different colors than the animals you purchased. -- Fields in this edition don’t grow linearly even though they were sown that way. Instead, they appear to grow in weird patches. Several times I’ve had a row where the top and bottom are ready to harvest but the square in the middle is still growing, which makes absolutely no sense. -- This edition will tell you there’s “Great Demand at Barn” but “Barn” doesn’t show as a selling station in the Prices menu, so you can’t tell what that demand means. To be fair, FS17 wasn’t without its own problems, and while some of those have been fixed for FS20, others haven’t. For example, the A.I. worker still has issues. You’ll still have to double-check their work because there will be spots they will have missed that a human player can reach with no problem. So what’s new with FS20 that wasn’t in FS17? Two main things: horses, and cotton. The horses were what excited me the most, when I found out you could ride them in the game. Unfortunately what you find out is not that you “can” ride them but that you “must” ride them. You have to ride each one every day for ten days in order to get it up to its maximum selling price. And you have to take time to do it yourself, A.I. workers can’t ride the horses for you. How much time? Ten days in the game is over 6 hours of real-life play. So if you’re committed to training horses in the game it’s going to take you 6 hours from purchasing them to selling them. You can only have up to 8 horses at one time, and horses don’t breed (because you can never have more than 8). The biggest drawback to the horses is YOU CAN’T NAME THEM! So you may think you’re going to buy a black horse and name it Black Beauty, or have a horse named Seabiscuit, or buy four horses and name them after the four horsemen of the apocalypse, but you can’t. Instead the game names them all for you, and half the time it comes up with okay-sounding names, but half the time it comes up with crap horse names like “Uma” and “Epona” and “Fabio.” (I’m not making those up, those are real names from the game.) So what about cotton? Well, it turns out cotton in FS20 is like sugar beets or potatoes in FS17: you have to buy a special planter to sow the crop, and buy a special (expensive!) harvester that only works for that one crop type, and its header is no wider than the harvester itself, which means it takes forever to harvest a field, and the price points are always much lower than soybeans (which is still the “king crop” in FS20 just like it was in FS17). If you want to try out farming cotton in the game, you first have to save up over $500k to be able to afford the vehicles and equipment needed. Then, it takes several fields to fill up one cotton harvester with one bale (it only unloads itself when 100% full, you can’t force it to empty to sell what you have so far). Bottom line is, cotton isn’t worth it. Plant soybeans instead. Is there anything good I can say about this edition? Very little, I’m afraid, but the nice new touches are very nice indeed: -- You now auto-unload at the selling stations without having to select Unload, and all of the selling stations now have signs with visible names on them. -- Tractors will now auto-attach to things when you back up to them without have to select Attach. -- The vehicle shop is right across the street from your farm. -- Filling up your water tanker from the multiple water well locations is free. -- There are glowing icons painted on the ground to make it very clear which spot is meant for what, so there’s no confusing where the straw goes vs. where the hay goes, or where to get liquid fertilizer vs. where to get solid fertilizer. -- And the biggest “plus” this edition has to offer: you no longer have to clean up after your animals. (Which you wouldn’t be able to do anyway, because there are no telehandlers in this edition.) If you’ve never played Farming Simulator and someone gives you this edition as a birthday or Christmas present, great, have fun with it. But if you’re going to be spending your own money, buy the original “Farming Simulator for Switch” (FS17), because it is a hundred times better than this edition. (But make sure you don’t buy the knock-off title “Professional Farmer” because that game is even worse than this one!) ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 14, 2022 by Ivo Shandor

  • Dumbed Down
I bought this for my husband and he says this version has been “dumbed down” severely compared to the other games.
Reviewed in the United States on August 24, 2021 by Mandie

  • Waste
My 12 yrs son hates it, loves 17 and 19. But 20, was a huge disappointment. They took out all the fun stuff.
Reviewed in the United States on January 9, 2021 by shae

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