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- I’ve Somehow Gotten Stronger When I Improved My Farm-Related Skills turns farming into an overpowered anime gimmick that’s ridiculous—but kind of fun.
- The show starts strong with a hilarious premise, but suffers from rushed pacing, underdeveloped characters, and trope-heavy storytelling.
- Great for fans of chaotic, low-stakes isekai comedy—but if you're looking for emotional depth or narrative growth, you might want to skip this season’s harvest.
I've Somehow Gotten Stronger When I Improved My Farm-Related Skills: A Hilarious Mess or Hidden Gem?
If you’ve ever thought, “I wish someone made an anime where the protagonist levels up their farming skills so hard they accidentally become a god-tier warrior,” then I’ve Somehow Gotten Stronger When I Improved My Farm-Related Skills is here to say, “Challenge accepted.”
This show follows Al Wayne, a wholesome guy with one dream: becoming the Ultimate Farmer™. But as anime logic would have it, he maxes out his agriculture stats so absurdly that he becomes a walking weapon. One moment he's harvesting carrots, the next he’s slicing through dragons like a hot scythe through butter.
And thus, a reluctant hero is born—one who’d rather be planting potatoes than saving kingdoms.

From Soil to Swordplay: Absurdly Entertaining
Let’s be clear: the premise is brilliant in a completely bonkers kind of way. The idea of farming leading to combat prowess is so anime it hurts, and I low-key respect the commitment. There’s something genuinely fun about a guy who just wants to farm being constantly dragged into high-stakes battles and political plots.
Al doesn’t want to be a hero. He just wants to grow the best crops this side of the fantasy realm. And that reluctant energy? Honestly kind of charming.
But as the episodes roll on, the novelty starts to wear thin.
Where It Falls Flat: Pacing and Plot Whiplash
While the setup is hilarious, the execution struggles. The pacing is all over the place—plot points come flying at you like poorly aimed magic missiles. One minute it’s a lighthearted farming montage, the next it’s “Oh no, the kingdom is under attack by demons!”
The supporting characters are unfortunately just stock anime archetypes:
- The tsundere.
- The noble princess.
- The evil overlord.
- The mysterious mentor type.
They pop in and out so quickly that you never really get attached. It feels like the show is in a rush to tick off every anime box before the harvest season ends.
Visuals and Vibes: Serviceable but Not Standout
The animation is fine, nothing groundbreaking. Action scenes are passable, character designs are cute but familiar, and there’s nothing visually that screams "must-watch." It’s very much a “background anime”—something you might throw on while folding laundry or gaming on a second screen.
The world-building has potential, but it's surface-level. The political drama, the fantasy lore, the farming mechanics—none of them get the depth they deserve. It's like the show planted seeds but forgot to water them.
🧑🌾 Land of Geek Rating: 6/10 – A Gimmick That Doesn't Fully Bloom
✅ Pros:
- 🌾 Original (and hilarious) core concept
- 💬 Al is a likeable, non-OP-obsessed protagonist
- 🎭 Embraces its ridiculous tone without shame
- 😄 Good for light, low-stakes entertainment
- 🧃 You’ll never look at farming the same way again
❌ Cons:
- 🌀 Pacing is erratic and rushed
- 🧱 Shallow character development across the board
- 😴 Lacks emotional or narrative depth
- 🧻 Storylines get dropped as quickly as they’re introduced
- 📦 Feels more like a novelty than a lasting experience
🌽 Fun Concept, Flat Execution
I’ve Somehow Gotten Stronger When I Improved My Farm-Related Skills is exactly what it sounds like—ridiculous, over-the-top, and occasionally laugh-out-loud funny. It’s a novelty anime, a goofy little snack rather than a full-course meal. If you're looking for deep lore or emotional gut punches, keep walking. But if you’re into chaotic isekai shenanigans with a farming twist? This one's worth a spin.
It won’t change your life—but it might grow on you.
Stay rooted in reality and reap more ridiculous anime reviews at Land of Geek Magazine!
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