The Holo House Interaction Manual: How to Do Hand Job Tasks and Interactions Explained

The Holo House Interaction Manual: How to Do Hand Job Tasks and Interactions Explained

If you’ve spent any time in the HoloCure universe, you know it’s not just about dodging endless waves of fans or picking the right weapons. It’s the side content that really sucks you in. Specifically, the Holo House (or Holo House) update changed the vibe of the game entirely. It turned a bullet-heaven survival game into a cozy management sim where you can fish, farm, and decorate. But for newer players or those coming back after a break, figuring out how to do hand job tasks—basically the manual labor and interaction mechanics within the house—can be a bit confusing at first.

Honestly, the UI is pretty simple once it clicks. You aren't just running around aimlessly. You're managing a staff of "HoloWorkers," keeping your pets fed, and making sure your garden doesn't turn into a patch of dried weeds.

Getting Started With Manual Tasks in Holo House

First things first. You can’t do much of anything if you haven't unlocked the area. You need to play the main game modes to earn enough Holocoins to actually get the house up and running. Once you're in, the "hand job" aspect refers to the manual interactions your character performs.

Movement is standard. Interaction is usually mapped to the 'Z' key or 'Enter' on a keyboard, or the bottom face button on a controller.

The Garden and Soil Prep

Farming is the backbone of your Holo House economy. It's how you get ingredients for cooking, which provides massive buffs for your actual combat runs.

To start, walk up to a plot of land. You'll see a prompt. This is where the manual work begins. You have to select your seeds, plant them, and—most importantly—water them. If you don't water them, they don't grow. It sounds obvious, but when you're busy trying to manage five different things, it's easy to forget that one dry patch in the corner.

Different crops have different growth times. Some take a few minutes of real-world time; others take longer. You’ll notice that as you progress, you can upgrade your watering can to cover more tiles at once. This is a life-saver. Doing it one by one is a grind. Upgrading makes the manual labor feel less like a chore and more like an efficient system.

Managing the HoloWorkers

This is where the real depth is. You can hire various creatures (like the iconic UPROAR! mascots or standard fan designs) to gather coins for you while you’re away. But they don't work for free. And they definitely don't work if they're tired.

Management is a manual task.

You have to physically walk over to the management board. From there, you check their stamina. If their stamina hits zero, they stop producing. You have to manually "feed" them to get them back to work. This creates a loop:

  1. Fish or farm to get food.
  2. Cook the food at the stove.
  3. Take that food to the worker board.
  4. Distribute it to your staff.

It’s a cycle. If you neglect the manual feeding, your coin flow dries up. Simple as that.

Fishing: The Ultimate Test of Patience

Fishing in Holo House is a rhythm-based mini-game. It’s probably the most "hands-on" job in the entire expansion. When you cast your line, you have to wait for the exclamation mark. Then, you hit the buttons in the correct sequence.

The prompts move fast.

If you mess up the sequence, the fish gets away. Different rods (which you buy from the shop) make this easier or allow you to catch rarer fish. Rare fish equal better food and more XP for your character's house level.

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Cooking and Kitchen Mechanics

You can't just eat raw fish. Well, you can, but it’s a waste.

Inside the house, there’s a kitchen. Walking up to the stove opens the cooking menu. This is another manual interaction where you combine the items you've gathered through your other "hand jobs" like farming and fishing.

Pro tip: Pay attention to the recipes. Some dishes require specific combinations of crops and fish. These dishes provide the best buffs for your HoloWorkers, keeping them energized for much longer than basic ingredients would.

Decorating and Organizing

While it doesn't "produce" anything, decorating is a huge part of the experience. You buy furniture from the shop using the coins your workers generated.

To place an item, you enter the "Edit" mode. Here, the controls shift. You aren't moving a character; you're moving a cursor. You can rotate items, stack certain things, and basically turn your Holo House into a shrine for your favorite Oshi. It’s surprisingly deep. People have recreated entire scenes from Hololive lore just using the furniture system.

Why Manual Interaction Matters for Progression

You might wonder why you should bother with all this manual clicking and moving when the main game is an action survival.

The answer is the Buff System.

The food you cook in the Holo House can be eaten before you start a Stage Mode or Endless Mode run. These aren't minor 1% increases. We're talking about significant boosts to HP, Attack, and Speed. If you're struggling to clear Stage 3 (Hard), the difference-maker is almost always the prep work you did in the house.

  • Farming provides the veggies.
  • Fishing provides the protein.
  • Worker Management provides the coins to buy upgrades.

It's all connected. If you skip the "hand jobs" in the house, you're essentially playing the game on a much harder difficulty than necessary.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

A lot of people think they can just hire workers and walk away. You can't.

Another big mistake? Ignoring the house level. As you do more manual tasks—planting, fishing, cooking—your "House Level" increases. This unlocks better seeds, better furniture, and more worker slots. If you just do the bare minimum, you'll stay stuck with low-tier workers who barely make any money.

Also, don't hoard your ingredients. The game is generous with them if you're consistent. Use your best food to keep your highest-level workers active. It's an investment.

Moving Forward With Your Holo House

To really master the Holo House, you need to establish a routine. Every time you log in, go to the garden first. Harvest whatever grew while you were gone. Re-plant immediately. Then, check the worker board. Feed whoever is low on stamina. If you have extra time, spend five minutes fishing to replenish your food stock.

This routine takes maybe three minutes once you get the hang of it. But those three minutes will fund your upgrades for the rest of your playtime.

Next Steps for Your House:

  1. Upgrade your Hoe and Watering Can immediately. This reduces the amount of manual clicks needed for farming by 50% or more.
  2. Focus on Hire Slots. More workers mean more passive income, even if they require more frequent feeding.
  3. Save for the Golden Rod. It makes the fishing mini-game significantly more forgiving and increases the catch rate of high-tier fish used in top-level recipes.

Once you have these basics down, the manual labor in Holo House stops being a mystery and starts being the engine that drives your entire HoloCure experience.