In the Farm Tribe series, players can find various hidden items to complete specialized collections. These items often morph or blend into the environment, making them difficult to spot without careful scanning. Farm Tribe 2: Collection Items & Locations
In Farm Tribe 2, there are 30 Morphing Objects and 12 Statuettes hidden across the map. Morphing Objects (30 Total):
Vases (4): Found near the main house and surrounding garden areas.
Golden Dishes (4): Look near the storehouse and stone pathways.
Masks (4): Hidden primarily in the forested or darker corners of the map. (5): Often found on trees or wooden structures.
Skulls (6): Typically found near the cave or rocky outcrops. Seashells (7): Located along the beach and pier areas.
Statuettes (12 Total): These are scattered throughout the entire island, usually tucked behind buildings or foliage. Farm Tribe: Dragon Island (Farm Tribe 3)
In the Dragon Island installment, collections are often tied to completing specific story quests or clearing debris.
Salamanders: One common tricky location for the salamander is on the right corner of the main house roof, just above the storehouse.
Order Board Items: If you are struggling to find specific "Adventure Items" required for orders, they are typically found by clearing specific map objects like grass, stones, or crates.
Quest-Specific Items: Some "collections" are actually quest items, such as finding the Pharaoh or exploring the Underground route. General Tips for Finding Items
Hover Over Everything: Items often "morph" (change shape or color slightly). If your cursor changes or an object flickers, it is likely a collection piece.
Check Roofs and Behind Trees: Developers frequently hide small items (like caterpillars or salamanders) on top of buildings or directly behind the trunks of large trees.
Clear the Map: In Dragon Island, many collection items only become visible after you have cleared the surrounding fog or debris. Farm Tribe - Steam Community
The Hollow Stump (Center Path)
A giant tree stump with a red mushroom on top. Tap the mushroom first, then the crack in the stump. This two-step interaction is tricky. Yield: 3 Mushrooms (edible for energy) and 1 Beetle (used for fishing bait). Respawn: 6 hours.
The Old Well (Northwest Corner)
Directly behind the chicken coop, you’ll see a stone well covered in vines. Tap the mossy stones at the base. This collection location respawns every 8 hours and provides 3-5 Clay and sometimes a Silver Nugget. The visual cue is a faint sparkling dust effect.
The Underground Root Cellar
This is the most frequently missed collection location on the homestead. Swipe left on the cellar door (the small mound with a wooden latch near the pumpkin patch) and then tap the bottom-left corner. Insider tip: You must have repaired the cellar during Level 7 for this to activate. Reward: 1-2 Onion Seeds + 50 Coins.
8. Optimizing Your Collection Route (Pro Strategy)
To farm efficiently, create a 5-minute circuit:
- Start at Home Farm → Berry bush, pond, oak tree.
- Fast travel to Forest Glade → Mushrooms + hollow tree.
- (If daytime) Mountain Pass → Iron ore.
- (If nighttime) Swamp Village → Glowing mushrooms.
- End at animal pens → Collect products.
Do this route every 30 minutes for max drops.
10. Cheat Sheet: Final Quick Reference Table
| Zone | Best Item | Exact Location | |------|-----------|----------------| | Home Farm | Wild Berries | South fence bush | | Forest Glade | Glowing Mushroom | Stone arch (night) | | Mountain Pass | Golden Feather | Eagle nest (need rope) | | Swamp Village | Croaking Crystal | Behind witch’s hut painting | | Event Area | Seasonal items | Varies (check in-game calendar) |
The Archaeology of the Acreage
Every collection location tells a story. Game designers place these items not randomly, but with a specific anthropological logic. Consider the "Lost Tools" collection. You will not find the Iron Plowshare in the bakery; you find it wedged against the fence post at the edge of Field #7. You will not find the Milk Pail in the General Store; you find it submerged in the watering trough.
This spatial logic creates a silent narrative. The farm becomes an archaeological dig site of a previous, busier life. When you tap the old tree stump by the railroad tracks and receive a "Golden Pocket Watch," the game is implying that a conductor dropped it a decade ago. When you find a "Crystal Marble" near the goat pen, you imagine a child playing while their parents tended the animals.
These locations function as anchors of memory. They transform your sterile grid of soil plots into a homestead with history.