Seeds Of Resilience



Seeds of Resilience for Thriving Bioregionalism Marjorie Harris BSc, IOIA V.O. P.Ag Bioregionalism is a philosophical concept that promotes the harmonization of human culture and activities with those of the environmental bioregion they reside in. There is also an emphasis on local food production for local markets, including indigenous plants and animals. The organic community. This holiday season, Episcopal Relief & Development invites supporters and congregations to sow seeds of resilience in communities around the world by giving a gift from Gifts for Life, the organization’s alternative gift catalog. After a few months, Tavrox was hired by Goblinz Studio and Seeds of Resilience could get a good amount of marketing time and expertise. Johann did his amazing Steam marketing optimization and we got decent long-term sales during Early Access. Every month got an update, as you can read here (link). Seeds of Resilience Ready to start anew? Build a village from scratch in Seeds of Resilience. Learn to choose the right items, understand nature's patterns, use real life-based constructions and craft techniques. Seeds of Resilience Ready to start anew? Build a village from scratch in Seeds of Resilience. Learn to choose the right items, understand nature's patterns, use real life-based constructions and craft techniques in this turn-based tycoon game.

The Future of Food: Seeds of Resilience

A compendium of Perspectives on Agricultural Biodiversity from Around the World

Robust seed systems are central to sustainable food systems that are renewable, resilient, equitable, diverse, healthy, and interconnected. We also believe that there is an urgency to supporting community based and farmer managed seed systems in order to protect and enhance seed diversity.

Recognizing this, the Global Alliance for the Future of Food commissioned experts from around the world to weigh in on a future that protects and improves resilient seed systems. This Compendium, which includes an Opportunities Report by agricultural biodiversity researchers Emile Frison and Toby Hodgkin, as well as twelve commentaries from a diverse range of experts, including farmers, community activists, business representatives, researchers, and scientists to better understand where we could collectively focus our efforts to address this issue.

Seeds Of Resilience

The compendium highlights:

  • Threats to, and factors affecting, the preservation and maintenance of seed biodiversity;
  • What is needed to protect and enhance community based seed systems;
  • The social institutions and socio-economic factors that are supporting seed biodiversity;
  • Good policy practice on, and barriers to, agricultural biodiversity embedded in legislation at international, national and regional levels; and,
  • Key actors in agricultural biodiversity, funding gaps, and recommendations for strengthening community based efforts.

The Global Alliance will be will be sharing its recommendations and exploring how to best work with others to strengthen support for community based and farmer managed seed systems at key events over the coming months.

Related MaterialsFull CompendiumCompendium PDFOne PagerSynthesis of FindingsSemillas de Resiliencia: Síntesis de Hallazgos Key MessagesQ&A’sSocial Media KitPress ReleaseMedia AlertMedia Release

I played an awful lot of Seeds of Resilience for this review, although I kind of disliked the experience, despite feeling absolutely compelled to play more. This is going to be tricky to score…

Seeds of Resilience is a fairly bog-standard looking take on the isometric landscape style of game, its twist being that this is a survival-based challenge. So it’s basically Civilization II on a much smaller scale. All the detail has been rendered nicely, and the development team went to great lengths planning and researching their project, which bodes well.

Each turn, the castaways you control will lose health if they’re not warm and fed. The elements (wind, mainly) can damage structures, so you’ll need to gather lots of raw materials, build sets of tools, and unlock a full cast of craftables to assist in the struggle. Each survivor can accomplish a set amount of work per turn, and has their own skillset which improves throughout a run. These details, in conjunction with the wide range of raw materials and possible uses for them, go a long way to creating a challenging and addictive strategy game.

It must be said that not much is really ‘happening’ — at least, not in the eyes of the player, anyway. The action isn’t accompanied by anything more sophisticated than materials flying about the screen when collected, and buildings going up in various stages. The survivors themselves have no representation within the game, except for their initial appearance landing their raft on the island.

It’s a style that gives Seeds of Resilience a very basic ‘board game’ type of a feel, which is by no means a bad thing. The turn-based approach is necessary because there is quite a bit to consider when making each turn, and a lot to keep track of if you want to take full advantage of each character’s traits. A single turn can take many minutes to think about, which can feel quite empowering, and that’s definitely fun.

So, where does it all go wrong? Well, playing Seeds of Resilience is a chore, something a game should never be. The UI is controlled by a confusing combination of joystick and d-pad, it uses icons that aren’t always totally clear, and its menu takes a lot of getting used to. Even after 20 hours of gameplay, I was still struggling to use it.

But the worst sin of all is the terrible, terrible performance of all this. It’s a sad day when even a turn-based strategy game can be ruined by slow performance, but although initial load and the transition after end-of-turn can be bafflingly erratic, it’s the lag that directly affects the UI that really spoils the day. Quite how this release managed to emerge, I can’t imagine. I can’t see anyone playing this game with all the stuttering and pausing — which gets worse the longer you play — and thinking ‘this is fine’, but apparently, it still happened.

And in all those fractions of stolen seconds, I began to think about how even the core gameplay — whilst admittedly playable, even when you’re forcing it — isn’t anything particularly special. At best, the missions start off very easy, then quickly become pleasingly difficult. But the overall challenge of the game doesn’t take too long to learn how to overcome, and after that, it loses much of its interest.

2

Summary

Seeds Of Resilience Review

Seeds of Resilience is ultimately a sad disappointment. The core game is compelling, but its major drawbacks – the awkward UI and the sluggish performance – really hold it back from succeeding as an actual game, which is crucial.