I’m sure most Disney Dreamlight Valley players have already spent a good chunk of their time collecting flowers, whether it’s completing that collection, completing a few quests for the Dreamlight Valley character roster found in your beautiful town, or creating new fantasies piece of furniture. It is a difficult task at best, but it becomes even more clumsy due to the similarity of the colors that can make you hunt down bad plants in the farming game.
Getting together in Dreamlight Valley can sometimes be one of the most frustrating aspects, especially if you need a lot of flowers of the same color and type. For example, in one of Buzz Lightyear’s missions, he must build a balloon arch with several blue and silver balloons, for which he must collect 20 of each of three different blue colors.
This is already a pretty complex request, considering that only a certain number of flowers spawn at a time, and they tend to take a while to return once you collect the ones that are. But it gets more problematic because it can be quite difficult to tell which colors are which. For example, the blue and white flowers of the star lily are very similar in coloration, as are the blue and purple euphorbias. At the same time, the white swamp spurge is almost turquoise, which means it can also be mistaken for blue if not seen up close.
This is also a common problem in the Forgotten Lands: orange and red nasturtium petals are very similar in hue, especially when seen in the shadows of a dense forest. It just makes the process of finding what you’re really looking for a bit more difficult than it should be.
A commenter on Reddit Dreamlight Valley asks if players are struggling with this, saying, “I swear I picked up three blue milkweed just to have it as a white option in my inventory.” They mention that they have a slight color vision problem due to a visual impairment, but they are not color blind.
However, several answers indicate that they have the exact same problem, and I’ve certainly run into similar problems. Another reviewer notes that trying to distinguish between soft, hard, and dark wood is also a big problem, especially when shadows come into play, and I agree. My response was pretty much the same as theirs: “I just collected everything and put it in chests, trying to find a dark tree took me ten years to see, so now I don’t stress too much!”
Luckily, it looks like the Dreamlight Valley storage chests will be expanding soon. Stay tuned to PCGamesN for the release date of the next Dreamlight Valley update, as well as a detailed guide to all the Disney Dreamlight Valley recipes. If Remy-powered cooking mayhem isn’t enough for you, check out the other best cooking games on PC for more places to indulge in culinary delights.
Source : PC Gamesn