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Cloud Gardens will cultivate ruined urban ecosystems later this yearHome grown

Home grown

If there’s one thing we can all seem to agree on, it’s that human civilisation will make a beautiful corpse - A quiet reassurance to the idea that, even once we’ve all bitten the dust, life will find a way to carry on regardless of the concrete messes we leave behind. Announced today,Cloud Gardenswants you to tend to those spaces, helping life flourish from urban decay when it arrives on Steam next year.Properly revealed today,Cloud Gardensis a collaboration betweenKingdomdeveloper Noio and Eli Cauley, who’s developed a number of lovely solo games over onItch.Soo.. official announcement time! ?Cloud Gardens is a chill game about using plants to overgrow post-industrial wasteland dioramas ???Aiming to release on Steam EA later in 2020https://t.co/zhl7xwPDvzRTs and wishlists are super appreciated! ?#CloudGardens#indiegamepic.twitter.com/SoyAgxv5gs— Thomas van den Berg ⛰ (@noio_games)July 28, 2020To see this content please enable targeting cookies.Manage cookie settingsEach scene in Cloud Gardens' six-chapter campaign tasks you with bringing life to one of its decayed dioramas. At first, you’re given a handful of seeds to sprinkle in particular spots to kick things off - but as your garden grows, you’ll unlock more junk to place around, creating platforms and focal points to wrap your ecosystem around. The goal in each stage is to completely flood the environment with life - but if you’d rather just potter around in your own concrete allotment, Cloud Gardens will also offer a completely freeform sandbox mode.If you’re a regular Sunday reader, you might recognise Cloud Gardens from ascreenshots post back in March. Truth be told, it’s been hard not to post about it every week a screen shows up, so stunning are its brutal, overgrown rooftops emerging from comforting evening mists of all colours. I do quite like that Cloud Garden isn’t even the only brutalist botany sim out there, withanother unnamed effort popping up earlier this monthcourtesy of Estonian duo Elina and Johann.Cloud Gardens is set to sprout into early access onSteamlater this year.

If there’s one thing we can all seem to agree on, it’s that human civilisation will make a beautiful corpse - A quiet reassurance to the idea that, even once we’ve all bitten the dust, life will find a way to carry on regardless of the concrete messes we leave behind. Announced today,Cloud Gardenswants you to tend to those spaces, helping life flourish from urban decay when it arrives on Steam next year.Properly revealed today,Cloud Gardensis a collaboration betweenKingdomdeveloper Noio and Eli Cauley, who’s developed a number of lovely solo games over onItch.Soo.. official announcement time! ?Cloud Gardens is a chill game about using plants to overgrow post-industrial wasteland dioramas ???Aiming to release on Steam EA later in 2020https://t.co/zhl7xwPDvzRTs and wishlists are super appreciated! ?#CloudGardens#indiegamepic.twitter.com/SoyAgxv5gs— Thomas van den Berg ⛰ (@noio_games)July 28, 2020To see this content please enable targeting cookies.Manage cookie settingsEach scene in Cloud Gardens' six-chapter campaign tasks you with bringing life to one of its decayed dioramas. At first, you’re given a handful of seeds to sprinkle in particular spots to kick things off - but as your garden grows, you’ll unlock more junk to place around, creating platforms and focal points to wrap your ecosystem around. The goal in each stage is to completely flood the environment with life - but if you’d rather just potter around in your own concrete allotment, Cloud Gardens will also offer a completely freeform sandbox mode.If you’re a regular Sunday reader, you might recognise Cloud Gardens from ascreenshots post back in March. Truth be told, it’s been hard not to post about it every week a screen shows up, so stunning are its brutal, overgrown rooftops emerging from comforting evening mists of all colours. I do quite like that Cloud Garden isn’t even the only brutalist botany sim out there, withanother unnamed effort popping up earlier this monthcourtesy of Estonian duo Elina and Johann.Cloud Gardens is set to sprout into early access onSteamlater this year.

If there’s one thing we can all seem to agree on, it’s that human civilisation will make a beautiful corpse - A quiet reassurance to the idea that, even once we’ve all bitten the dust, life will find a way to carry on regardless of the concrete messes we leave behind. Announced today,Cloud Gardenswants you to tend to those spaces, helping life flourish from urban decay when it arrives on Steam next year.

Properly revealed today,Cloud Gardensis a collaboration betweenKingdomdeveloper Noio and Eli Cauley, who’s developed a number of lovely solo games over onItch.

Soo.. official announcement time! ?Cloud Gardens is a chill game about using plants to overgrow post-industrial wasteland dioramas ???Aiming to release on Steam EA later in 2020https://t.co/zhl7xwPDvzRTs and wishlists are super appreciated! ?#CloudGardens#indiegamepic.twitter.com/SoyAgxv5gs— Thomas van den Berg ⛰ (@noio_games)July 28, 2020

Soo.. official announcement time! ?

Cloud Gardens is a chill game about using plants to overgrow post-industrial wasteland dioramas ???

Aiming to release on Steam EA later in 2020https://t.co/zhl7xwPDvz

RTs and wishlists are super appreciated! ?#CloudGardens#indiegamepic.twitter.com/SoyAgxv5gs

— Thomas van den Berg ⛰ (@noio_games)July 28, 2020

To see this content please enable targeting cookies.Manage cookie settings

Each scene in Cloud Gardens' six-chapter campaign tasks you with bringing life to one of its decayed dioramas. At first, you’re given a handful of seeds to sprinkle in particular spots to kick things off - but as your garden grows, you’ll unlock more junk to place around, creating platforms and focal points to wrap your ecosystem around. The goal in each stage is to completely flood the environment with life - but if you’d rather just potter around in your own concrete allotment, Cloud Gardens will also offer a completely freeform sandbox mode.

If you’re a regular Sunday reader, you might recognise Cloud Gardens from ascreenshots post back in March. Truth be told, it’s been hard not to post about it every week a screen shows up, so stunning are its brutal, overgrown rooftops emerging from comforting evening mists of all colours. I do quite like that Cloud Garden isn’t even the only brutalist botany sim out there, withanother unnamed effort popping up earlier this monthcourtesy of Estonian duo Elina and Johann.

Cloud Gardens is set to sprout into early access onSteamlater this year.