Stardew Valley Auto-Petter

Stardew Valley has an Auto-Petter, and I love that I’m just now finding out

The joy of a game that just… keeps… going

Recommended Videos

Some of my all-time favorite games have the same thing in common: no matter how much time I sink into them, it feels like there’s always a chance I’ll discover something new, either organically on my own, or in an off-the-cuff community discussion. These games are very clearly finite, but they have this ethereal “Today I Learned” quality to them. One of the best examples, for me anyway, is Stardew Valley ā€” this game has leeegs.

Case in point, Reddit user the_changinator shared their latest find “after four playthroughs” and “over 500 hours of gameplay” in Stardew Valley: the Auto-Petter.

after 4 play throughs, over 500 hours of gameplay, i finally found it
byu/the_changinator inStardewValley

While you’d normally want to pet your animals to form a closer bond with them (and because they’re just plain cute), overworked or overwhelmed farmers can use the Auto-Petter in coops and barns to at least keep their critters feeling “content.” Who knew?

I never found this invention, and I’m certain plenty of you could say the same.

The Auto-Petter first appeared in the now-pretty-legendary 1.5 update, and it’s tied to the conniving JojaMart questline ā€” kind of. That’s arguably the “easy” way of getting the tool. You can outright buy it for 50,000g after finishing the Joja Community Development Form. Or, if you’re not a corpo, you can try your luck at finding an Auto-Petter in a chest in the Skull Cavern. I haven’t done the Joja quest and I never will. It’s not worth the guilt!

(If you’re determined to go the luck-based route, here’s a helpful guide.)

On a wholesome note, the Auto-Petter isn’t meant as a total replacement for hand-petting animals in Stardew Valley to raise their mood and friendship levels; for the best results, you’ll want to bond with your flock as well. I doubt I’ll ever get this tool, and that’s neat. Knowing it even exists as a possibility makes me appreciate this game even more.

I wish more games had this community spirit

Given the gradual nature of Stardew Valley, I feel like these tidbits are cyclical ā€” folks find something cool, share it, and move on, only for the next wave of players to repeat the same cycle of tip-sharing down the line. It’s a hell of a way for a video game to stay relevant long after its original release and content updates have come to an end. I super admire games that can maintain a lively and welcoming vibe in which new players don’t feel closed off from asking questions and sharing well-meaning fluff. I live for the fluff!

There are surely ways to build a game that encourages this communal behavior from the ground up ā€” but I feel like the best ones just seem to snowball as fans keep the conversation going out of continued passion. Even if you’re done actively playing a game, that doesn’t mean you’re ready to stop talking or reading about it. That’s why we’re here.


Destructoid is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission.Ā Learn more about our Affiliate Policy
Author
Image of Jordan Devore
Jordan Devore
Jordan is a founding member of Destructoid and poster of seemingly random pictures. They are anything but random.