

But that’s not all, players can recruit staff Farm Workers, build a Pantry to store produce, and construct a Shed to house farming-related items.īest Buds: Inmates who enjoy nature’s beauty can grow flowers and other plants recreationally. Room to Grow: Three outdoor rooms facilitate farming: Fruit Orchard, Farm Field and Vegetable Allotment. Produce can be exported or used as ingredients for inmate meals. Screen Rant was provided with a PC download code for the purposes of this review.Prison Architect: Going Green brings agriculture to your compound, introducing farming, produce exports, and a whole bunch of contraband.įruits of Labor: Farming introduces a new type of Prison Labor, allowing prisons to grow potatoes, wheat, apples, and more. Prison Architect - Going Green is out now for PC, PS4, Xbox One, and Nintendo Switch. Next: Three Stardew Valley Challenges For Players Who've Done Everything It's certainly something that fans of the original Prison Architect will want to pick up. It follows up on the same pertinent questions about the prison system that the main title provides, with some decent mechanics around its agricultural concepts. Overall Prison Architect - Going Green is a strong addition to the core game. However, it doesn't quite become a major game changer in the way that some players may expect, and lacks any new kinds of meaningful choices.

Inmates can now grow new contraband using the garden facilities which the player will need to keep an eye on, and the various allotments and orchards add a nice new element to the game's prison labor mechanics. All of these new features fit well into Prison Architect from a gameplay perspective, too, although there's nothing that is particularly exciting.
