{"id":357331,"date":"2023-01-10T16:00:16","date_gmt":"2023-01-10T22:00:16","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/jbsgame.com\/?p=357331"},"modified":"2023-01-10T04:12:39","modified_gmt":"2023-01-10T10:12:39","slug":"im-declaring-my-love-for-fishing-mini-games","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/jbsgame.com\/im-declaring-my-love-for-fishing-mini-games\/","title":{"rendered":"I’m declaring my love for fishing mini-games"},"content":{"rendered":"
Within my all-encompassing obsession with farming\/community simulators, there is yet another obsession, like the layers to an onion: I cannot stop playing the fishing mini-games. My current\u00a0Stardew\u00a0<\/em>Valley<\/em> save is set on the fishing-friendly river farm, most of my\u00a0Dreamlight Valley<\/em> villagers give me a fishing bonus, and the aquarium was the first part of the museum that I completed in Animal Crossing: New Horizons<\/em><\/a> by a country mile. In spite of my fascination with these mini games, I have next to no real-life interest in fish at all. Well, that’s not quite right. I like fish, in that I enjoy the ocean and aquariums and the like, but once they leave the water it’s game over.<\/p> As much as I’m an indoorsy person, I do have fond memories of fishing with my late Grandpa when I was a kid. We’d walk across the street into his neighbor’s yard and down a hill, where there was a sun-soaked pond populated with common fish species I no longer remember the names of. He would bait my hooks with the wriggling worms and grubs he pulled from his own garden (which I refused to touch), and nonchalantly threw the fish back after I reeled them in. I think he could tell that fishing wasn’t something I would have necessarily pursued on my own, but as stoic as he was, I was fairly certain he enjoyed my company, at least. Plus, I did learn to enjoy the quiet, contemplative nature of the past time.<\/p>