Stardew Valley player turns cabin into aquarium, showing off every fish

Stardew Valley player turns cabin into aquarium, showing off every fish

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You can have a total of three cabins in Stardew Valley, and they’re designed for co-op play. Players will often use them to store items or machinery, because cabins have more interior space than sheds while taking up a similarly slim footprint on a farm. But what if, instead, you filled that cabin with something more inventive and decorative?

Redditor Papikipp did just that, creating an aquarium inside one of his Stardew Valley cabins — bringing a little slice of Animal Crossing: New Horizons’ museum into the other popular cozy farming game.

“I actually used a cabin for this design, my main home is designed as an actual home,” Papikipp told Reporter Door via Reddit chat. “I was actually inspired by animal crossing’s museum aquariums. I like the idea of being able to showcase all the different fish we can catch in game and what better way than an aquarium. I just love seeing the fishes swim around, it makes the game so much more alive so to speak. It also helped me a lot with getting the master angler achievement.”

Papikipp’s aquarium is an impressive feat, both in its creative design and because of the fishing skill it required. His cabin not only features every single one of Stardew Valley’s 83 fish — it features two of each so “they wouldn’t be lonely,” he explained on Reddit. It took Papikipp roughly a week to create the aquarium — from designing it to catching the various fish — and he did so without mods, on Nintendo Switch.

“Completing it fully along with the fishies took about a week give or take since I had to wait for different seasons for different fishies,” Papikipp said. “Legendary fishes are always a pain, especially with the fishing mini game. The octopus was also a challenge, I would even say that it’s harder to catch than the legendaries. The specialty fishes in the mines and the desert (stonefish, lava fish, ice pip, etc) were also a bit of a challenge since their movement patterns are very unpredictable.”

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