The Farmer's Daughter (Commodore 64 game)

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The Farmer's Daughter (1983) is a text-based video game for the Commodore 64 produced by Nocturnal Software and written by R.W. Fisher and D.W.J. Sarhan.

The player's character is a traveling lightning rod salesman whose car breaks down near an old farmhouse. At the house, the player is met at the door by the titular character, a gorgeous, young girl who disappears from sight as soon as he asks to use the phone. While rummaging through the house the player finds her diary and learns which objects need to be collected to make her wildest sexual fantasy come true. While avoiding various pitfalls including her oversexed brothers, her father (who thinks you are a revenuer) and his dog, the objects described are collected and when he finds her in the hayloft... well you figure it out. The game is timed by movements so that all objectives must be completed before a certain number of movements is reached lest the player miss the tow truck and lose the game.

The game a fairly standard text-based adventure and is gleefully X-rated. But while there are no visuals, the game leaves the details to the player's imagination.

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