


Red Dead Redemption 2 is known for its rich horse features and variety in breeds and coat colors. Where Horse Gamers Find Their Fun Emergent Gameplay: Red Dead Trail Rides Passionate equestrians end up modding, role-playing, and developing emergent gameplay. Where you have a lot of horse-loving gamers unsatisfied with what the market offers, you have horse-loving gamers who find their own horse games where there are none. For those without access to real horses - as well as for anyone who simply loves these animals and wants to spend additional time with them in the digital realm - horse games should be a wonderful opportunity. There is no one ideal horse game idea that could satisfy every horse gamer’s wants and needs, but there are instead a variety of concepts and genres that could thrive off some good horse-focused gameplay, from open world adventures like Breath of the Wild and Shadow of the Colossus, to homestead management life sims such as Stardew Valley.įor every young rider who has the opportunity to get into a saddle in real life, there are other horse fans who cannot live that dream due a lack of funds, urban living conditions, or even age and disability. We could breed horses and train them without having to worry about real vet bills and the ethics of breeding for pretty colors we could build up relationships with fictional horses and make them friends and companions, as we do with NPCs in Animal Crossing or The Sims or we could manage a stable, upgrading tools and equipment, as in Minecraft or Terraria. In a well-made video game with horses, players could feast their eyes on how these beautiful creatures move and behave, all while riding through fields and forests, swamps and deserts. On the rare occasion that independent teams create horse games as passion projects, they tend to suffer from a lack of accessibility, if not flat-out bad design, and are often mismanaged in one way or the other. Very few players are willing to put up with the poor quality of options, and so those publishers assume that the target audience is small and can get no wider.

Publishers invest in low-effort horse games like My Riding Stables (2018) because they know that - thanks to uninformed parents and lack of serious competition - they’ll make their money back. Join me - video game producer, hobby horse game critic, and creator of The Mane Quest - for a closer look at what Horse Girl Canon-worthy games are, what they are lacking, and how passionate gamers and creators are finding their own fun where the industry doesn’t provide for them. And to every horse game enthusiast’s dismay, the genre has not really evolved from there. What followed was a long list of knock-offs and copycats, cash grabs, and shovelware that only the most passionate and desperate horse fans would tolerate. The horse game genre has been around since the early 2000s, when the unexpected success of titles like The Legacy of Rosemond Hill, Mary King’s Riding Star, and My Horse Farm proved to kids’ games publishers that there was money to be made off of young girls who wanted to spend more time with horses than their real-life circumstances allowed them to. You know how we sometimes discover niche game genres and just go “Huh, of course that’s a thing”? You might very well feel this way about the concept of horse games: video games where the primary mechanics are focused on riding, breeding, or taking care of horses. The Horse Girl Canon is Polygon's celebration and exploration of the books, films, TV, toys, and games that have become essential to the cross-generational "Horse Girl" life.
