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    Home » Millions are flocking to grow virtual gardens in viral Roblox game created by teenager

    Millions are flocking to grow virtual gardens in viral Roblox game created by teenager

    By SHOOTWednesday, July 30, 2025Updated:Monday, August 4, 2025No Comments231 Views
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    This image provided by Janzen Madsen shows the Roblox game called "Grow a Garden." (Janzen Madsen via AP)

    By Barbara Ortutay, Technology Writer

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) --

    Whether it serves as a chill escape from the onslaught of the real world or simply a way to beat vacation doldrums, a viral Roblox game about gardening has become the surprise hit of the summer.

    Grow a Garden, created by a 16-year-old in a few days, has shattered records for the most concurrent players of any game in history, beating out video games that take years and millions of dollars to develop.

    And there’s no one to shoot, fight or race. If your last attempt at cultivating vegetables was FarmVille in 2010, don’t worry — your tomatoes will grow even if you never water them.

    Grow a Garden is as simple as its name suggests — players can fill a plot of land with plants and animals, harvest and sell, trade or steal each others’ bounty. The game is low stress, with an aesthetic reminiscent of Minecraft and a soundtrack of soothing classical tunes such as Mozart’s Rondo Alla Turca playing in the background. Its popularity has further cemented Roblox’ place not just in the gaming world but in popular culture — for better or for worse, it’s where the kids hang out.

    “The word I keep hearing used over and over to describe this particular game is that it’s chill, which is just such a nice alternative. I get a lot of sort of that Animal Crossing vibe from it. You know, like you can check in, you can check your gardens, you can get some new seeds, you can plant them,” said Betsy Bozdech, editorial director at the nonprofit Common Sense Media. “I have an 11-year-old son who (plays it) and he says to him the big difference is that a lot of games have a big giant objective that you have to do, but in Grow a Garden, you can just kind of hang out and do what you want.”

    Coincidence or not, Grow a Garden soared to popularity around the same time that Take-Two Interactive announced it would delay the launch of its wildly anticipated Grand Theft Auto 6 until next year. In late June, the gardening game logged 21.6 million concurrent players, surpassing Fortnite’s previous record of 15.2 million according to Roblox. Analysts who follow Roblox’s stock say Grow a Garden is helping boost the company’s revenue and will push the company’s quarterly earnings numbers above Wall Street’s expectations.

    While it’s not clear if the GTA audience flocked to this simple gardening game to pass the time until then, the timing reignited the age-old debate about who gamers are and what titles are taken seriously by the video game establishment. It happened with Candy Crush, with puzzle games, with Animal Crossing. Are people who play cozy games true gamers? Or is the title reserved for the folks who shoot enemies in Call of Duty or drive around creating mayhem in GTA?

    “There’s a huge percentage of gamers that play Roblox and the actual industry just views it as like this esoterically immature platform of weird gameplay habits,” said Janzen Madsen, the New Zealand-based CEO and founder of Splitting Point studios, which acquired the game from its teenage creator. “Well, I actually think in five years this is what player expectation is gonna be. And because you guys haven’t embraced it, like you’re not gonna know how to make games.”

    To start growing your garden, you’ll need a Roblox account. The game will start you out with an empty plot and some money — sheckles — and a starter seed. From there, you can plant seeds, harvest and sell your crops and buy more seeds, animals or tools for your garden. While it is possible to play the game without spending real-world money, it will take longer. Once you sell enough crops, you earn money to buy more expensive seeds beyond basic carrots and blueberries.

    “For me, I just, I really want to get all the rarest stuff. I’m a completionist, so I want everything and that’s what’s fun for me,” said Leah Ashe, a YouTuber who plays Grow a Garden and other popular games to an audience of 5.3 million. “It’s really cool because you can come together because the seed shop is global, so everybody’s shop is the exact same. So you can work with other people and be like, ‘Oh my gosh, the sugar apple is in stock. Get online!’ The seed shop updates every five minutes, so there’s always something pulling you back into the game.”

    For Roblox, which has faced a backlash for not doing enough to protect kids on its gaming service, Grow a Garden has served as something of a reprieve — along with new safety measures such as chat restrictions and privacy tools.

    New players get help from more established peers who send them gifts and let them know when rare seeds become available in the seed shop.

    Bozdech said that “if you have the right supervision and guidance,” Roblox can be a positive experience for kids, allowing them to create their own designs or practice coding, for instance.

    “Something like Grow a Garden, particularly, is a nice opportunity maybe for parents and kids to play together,” she said.

    And perhaps the slow cultivating of a magical garden can benefit parents too.

    “It’s hitting a nerve, you know?” Bozdech said. “People need an escape from the world, I think we all do.”

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    Tags:Grow a GardenRoblox



    Thomas E. Sanders to be inducted into ADG Hall of Fame; Ron Funches set to host Excellence in Production Design Awards ceremony

    Monday, January 19, 2026
    Ron Funches (l) and Thomas E. Sanders

    The Art Directors Guild (ADG, IATSE Local 800) has announced that the late production designer Thomas E. Sanders will be inducted into the ADG Hall of Fame at the 30th Annual Excellence in Production Design Awards on February 28 at the InterContinental Los Angeles Downtown. Actor, comedian, and writer Ron Funches will serve as host of the ceremony. “Thomas E. Sanders’ legacy is etched into the very fabric of production design history,” said Dina Lipton, president of the Art Directors Guild. “His visionary work created worlds that elevated storytelling and set a standard of excellence that continues to inspire generations of designers, artists and filmmakers. We are deeply honored to induct him into the ADG Hall of Fame and celebrate the lasting impact of his extraordinary career.” From the 1990s through the 2010s, Sanders was celebrated for his visionary work on films including Braveheart, Saving Private Ryan, and Bram Stoker’s Dracula, earning Academy Award® nominations for the latter two. One of his proudest achievements was his work with Guillermo del Toro on the period horror-thriller Crimson Peak, whose gothic, richly textured and haunting production design defined the film’s tone and atmosphere. For this work, Sanders received the 2016 Saturn Award from the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films. His final project was Justin Lin’s Star Trek Beyond. Other landmark credits include Mission: Impossible II, directed by John Woo, and a career-long legacy of elevating cinematic storytelling through immersive, emotionally resonant visual worlds. Sanders passed away in 2017, and this honor celebrates his enduring influence on the art of production design. Sanders will be... Read More

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