Full notes
Full Tiny Eden update
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Repeated intro
Hello everyone,
What changed
- Balance
- Gameplay
- Performance
- Store
Before we get into specific mechanics, systems, or features, we wanted to start this devlog series with a simple question:
At first glance, Tiny Eden may look like a cozy plant-growing game, and in many ways, it is. There are plants to grow, an apartment to decorate, and places that you can visit in-game, where you can simply enjoy the space you live in and create.
But the idea behind Tiny Eden goes much deeper than that.
We wanted to explore what happens when gardening is brought indoors, where you need to balance perfect growing conditions with the much more limited space. This is where Tiny Eden really begins.
When people first see the game, it is easy to place it into a familiar category:
A cozy gardening game.
A small farming sim.
A relaxing plant-growing game.
Those descriptions are not wrong, but they are far too simple for what we are creating Tiny Eden is not about inheriting a farm, clearing fields, or growing rows of crops under the open sky. It is about starting somewhere much more familiar, at home, in an apartment, where space is limited, but growing conditions are there for you to make use of!
So, unlike other gardening/farming games, in Tiny Eden, you begin with a small indoor space and gradually turn it into a garden!
At first, your windowsill might be enough. You place your first pot, plant your first seed, and watch something begin to grow. Then you add another one, as you’ve got more seeds to sow. You then notice that people in your apartment start asking if you happen to have any fresh produce, so you add two more plants. As you gradually get immersed in gardening and growing, you find space for five plants, then eight, next thing you know, you’ve got thirteen plants and part of your house is now dedicated to them, and to grow more, you start to look at your living space!
Could that shelf hold another pot? Would this plant grow better near the window? Is there enough space here, or do you need to rearrange things?
Slowly, the apartment stops feeling like a room with plants in it, and starts to be more like a garden that happens to have a bed in it! That is the heart of the game.
Inspired by real indoor growing
One of the reasons Tiny Eden is set indoors is because that is where our own experience with many of these plants came from.
Every plant we have added to the game has been grown by our team, at home, in their apartments, and we’ve taken those experiences and put them into the game.
You do not have endless land. You do not have perfect conditions.
But you can create those conditions, after all, you have windows, pots, containers, shelves, corners, light sources, heat sources, soil, and much, much more.
The limitations are not there to make the game stressful, they are there because indoor gardening is often about working with what you have, learning what each plant needs, and slowly turning an ordinary space into something alive.
More than planting and waiting
A lot of farming games are built around a familiar rhythm:
Plant a seed.
Water it.
Wait.
Harvest.
Repeat.
Tiny Eden still has that satisfying cycle after all, this is what growing is like in a very simple way, but we wanted plant care to involve more than simply checking a timer.
Because you are growing indoors, each plant exists inside an environment that you control. The pot you choose, the soil you prepare, the amount of light and heat the plant receives, and the space it occupies all affect how your garden develops.
Afterall, some plants have their preferences.
Some plants need deep pots as their roots grow deep into the soil, others shallow roots, that spread over a larger area.
Some plants like sandy soils, others hate that type of soil.
Some plants like to grow when it is hot, others thrive in cooler temperatures.
And so on!
All of this means that the plants are not just objects you place down and forget about until they are ready; they need to be looked after.
As you play, you’ll begin to understand why one setup works better than another and learn which plants need more attention, which ones fit neatly into your space best, and how small changes can make your apartment garden healthier and more productive.
Progression in Tiny Eden is not only about unlocking more items or filling more space. It is also about becoming a better indoor gardener.
That is what Tiny Eden is really about.
It is a cozy indoor gardening game about space, knowledge, and growth, where every plant is part of a home you are slowly bringing to life. The best part is, since this is based on our experience growing plants (in real life), this is a perfect way to start learning about how to grow these plants for yourself.
Stay tuned, follow us on social media, and make sure to wishlist Tiny Eden on Steam if you have not done it yet.
https://store.steampowered.com/app/3375110/Tiny_Eden Join us on Discord >>> https://discord.gg/tinyedengame Follow us on X >>> https://x.com/TinyEdenGame Watch us on TikTok >>> https://www.tiktok.com/@tinyedengame Explore on Instagram >>> https://www.instagram.com/tinyedengame
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