Hunt other fish and sea creatures, feed and grow into larger beasts!Feed and Grow: Fish is an animal survival simulator in an amazing sea world. Start as Bibos or Raptor and straight away you are ready to dive in to the mesmerizing world of Feed and Grow.

At the moment the game is available via Steam on Early Access. It will include multiplayer and that's the main reason for the Early Access. We want to test it together with you and make it more awesome with new game modes, new playable fish and sea creatures, abilities and passives. Check it out now!


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In feed and grow fish you must become the biggest fish by eating and feeding smaller creatures and continuing to grow. The frenzy fish gameplay is simple enough to understand in Feed and Grow but its a fish eat fish world out there and you must prove to be the biggest and strongest fish at feed and grow fish!

In Feed and Grow fish you must become the biggest fish by eating smaller creatures and continuing to grow. The gameplay is simple enough to understand in Feed and Grow but its a fish eat fish world out there and you must prove to be the biggest and strongest fish!

Animal survival game based in the fish frenzy world! You start as Bibos the fish and straight away you are ready to dive in to the waters of the mesmerizing world of Feed and grow fish, Unlock evolution and take them out to enjoy your feeding frenzy in this monster fish game. Eat or be Eaten! Attack and eat other fishes to grow bigger, the real adventure begins once you become a bigger fish!

In feed and grow fish you must become the biggest fish by eating smaller creatures and continuing to grow. The feed and grow fish gameplay is simple enough to understand in feed fish and grow but its a fish eat fish world out there and you must prove to be the biggest and strongest Robot fish!

Hunt other fish and sea creatures, feed and grow into larger beasts! feed and grow fish is an animal survival simulator in an amazing sea world. Start as Bibos or Raptor and straight away you are ready to dive in to the mesmerizing world of feed and grow fish.

Is a new 2nd tier fish in River map that comes with a price of 10 points, Despite their own well known taste, adult salmons in nature feed mostly on other fish - therefore there's nothing wrong about eating one of them too!

Feed and Grow: Fish is an underwater simulator and a survival game. Since ocean life is very harsh, all fish must survive by feeding on other sea creatures. Depending on your size, you can hunt and feed on shrimps or have a hearty meal with a piranha. As you continue to feed, you unlock different levels and go from being a small fish to a huge one - think, shark!

The first level of the game begins with you as a Raptor or Bibos. You start exploring the fish simulation before becoming truly hungry. Once that happens, you have to feed, and you can do that easily by biting into small fish. Irrespective of how you fare, you get to explore aquatic life from the eyes of a fish.

You can swim alongside other fish or swim ahead to hunt. The game includes a large number of species, including prehistoric ones. It also shows how each one of them develops and stands in the food chain. You can play the game as an antiquated sea creature or a fish you may find in your house tank.

Apart from being a fun animal survival game, Feed and Grow: Fish gives a little information on all types of fish it introduces. The game also offers various maps for users to explore. All users, both young and old, can enjoy the ocean life along with the carnage that the game brings.

Apart from providing basic details about each type of fish that a player encounters, the game serves as an exercise in learning. Kids can quickly learn more about sea creatures with interactive gameplay that is fun and shows the story of evolution. The fish simulator can also act as a virtual world to introduce kids to the obligations that come with bringing home a pet.

Over the last centuries, we have greatly depleted the oceans, which used to have superabundance. Most unrecognized, this has dramatically reduced their resilience and their ability to mitigate challenges such as pollution and extreme climate. The decrease in fish in rivers and oceans destabilizes and puts under threat the global food web. Aquaculture (the farming of fish) has been posed as a solution. However, aquaculture fish are typically fed with processed fish caught in the wild. There is a need to find alternatives.

Here, we present a plant-based fish diet that is available at little to no cost, requires very little labor and can be grown in immediate proximity to the fish. In the last several months, our team has experimented with this diet and gradually reduced the commercially purchased fish feed for our Nile Tilapia fish. 70% of our fish diet now consists of a mix of chaya mansa (tree spinach), colocasia leaves, moringa leaves and banana leaves, with the commercial feed now at 30% and decreasing.

The advantages of transitioning from a commercial fish feed to a locally-grown organic fish feed are several. It reduces the costs, waste and energy required for transportation, processing, packaging and distribution. It assures that no artificial chemical compounds that might be used during commercial feed processing and conservation end up in the food chain, potentially compromising fish or human health. It adds to the overall nutritional value of fish feed, with micro and macronutrients which would be more bioavailable and better absorbed than commercial fish feed.

The factory produced fish feed is expensive and consists mostly of wild-caught fish. Several government-funded researchers and fish food manufacturers have been working on figuring out a recipe for fishless fish food. A current priority in the aquaculture industry is the need to partially or totally replace fishmeal with less expensive and easily available plant protein sources to reduce dependence on fish meal and soybean meal as the fundamental protein sources for aquatic animal diets without reducing the nutritional quality of feeds (Toan and Preston, 2010; Castillo and Gatlin, 2015).

We began studying the feasibility of using on-farm inputs as fish food as opposed to commercially processed fish feed pellets at The Venus Project Integrated Aquaponics System. Experiments are being conducted to evaluate the effect of using on-farm inputs, especially chaya mansa leaves, as a partial substitute of fish meal in fish diet on growth performance and feed utilization of Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus) fish. The fish were initially fed with a diet of Growell company with a minimum analysis of 32% crude protein, 3.5% crude fat, and not more than 7.0% crude fiber. Our daily feed regimen for fish now includes 30% weight of the above-mentioned diet plus on-farm inputs such as colocasia leaves, moringa leaves, banana leaves and chaya mansa leaves. These on-farm resources are cheap to produce, locally available, and are self-sustaining. We were able to cut down the pelleted fish feed to over 70% with this experiment. Results have begun to demonstrate that growth performance parameters (final body weight, weight gain, specific growth rate, and survival rate) were not affected at all with increasing the above on-farm inputs in fish diet.

Moringa (Moringa oleifera) or popularly called drumstick tree is traditionally cultivated as a backyard plant and used as a vegetable. It can also be grown as part of a living fence. Parts of Moringa used traditionally as human food are green pods, tender leaves, flowers, and oil from seeds. (Gopalakrishnan et al., 2016)

Other terrestrial plant leaf meals: Use of other leaf meals from terrestrial plants such as banana, cowpea, squash, broad bean, papaya beans, and cucumber are being evaluated for use as a potential protein source in the diet of Nile tilapia fish to replace fish meal. (Dorothy et al., 2018)

1. Growing Mushrooms

Mushrooms can be added to the system without requiring any additional space, by utilizing the shaded and unused ground areas beneath the vegetables. The moisture, temperature, and nutrient-rich aquaculture water we have seem like very favorable conditions for mushroom growth. We have done two trials so far, which were unsuccessful due to harsh climate and the different growing medium (sand). Learning from our experiences, we are getting ready to do a third trial. e24fc04721

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