My first 40 days in Moonlight Peaks started off with juicy feuds, but its anemic character writing is starting to show through

  • By: srtmorar@gmail.com
  • Date: July 7, 2026
  • Time to read: 3 min.


A new farm sim has launched today and, as is tradition, cozy game enjoyers gather round to ask each other: Is Moonlight Peaks worth it? I’m about 40 days (nights, actually) into my playthrough, so it’ll be just a bit longer before I can deliver our scored review, but I want to give some early impressions to help all my fellow farm simmers figure out if this month’s flavor is one to take a bite out of.

Played by

Lauren Morton headshot
Played by

Lauren Morton

I grew up on Harvest Moon: A Wonderful Life and have played dozens of farm sims in the past decade, so these days a rural chore sim really needs to stand out to hook me. Vampires, witches, and werewolves seem like exactly the fun new twist I want, but so far the writing in Moonlight Peaks is leaving me a little cold.

In my early preview of Moonlight Peaks, I called it Real Housewives of Stardew, which remains true. It’s got all the usual farm sim bits (crops, foraging, farm animals, friendship, crafting, mining, fishing, etc.) but the four families of supernaturals in town are feuding something fierce. There’s quite a lot of all-caps dialogue around here.

(Image credit: Little Chicken)

In the first few weeks, all that goofy toxic behavior is entertaining, but as I’ve continued playing, Moonlight Peaks feels like it can’t pick a tone. It plays Orlock the vampire patriarch as a comedic relief alcoholic, which feels a bit out of touch in 2026, but then in other moments attempts to treat that tense family situation as a genuine struggle for his daughter Mina.

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