Looks like a much better Simcity. Been watching gameplay and I am impressed, about to buy it. Anyone else excited for it?
quote:I watched a few people stream it this weekend and am VERY excited to play it. Looks like everything Simcity 2013 should have been.
Looks like a much better Simcity. Been watching gameplay and I am impressed, about to buy it. Anyone else excited for it?
quote:My city has about 80k people at the moment.
I'll be interested in hearing more thoughts, AFTER you play and develop a city for a little bit. Does the city breakdown and just stop working? How the game is coded is huge for a large city where problems can start showing up.
quote:You start on a "small" plot equal to the size of a normal Simcity 2013 plot. Eventually you can buy 8 more of them (I think even more with mods). You unlock services as your population hits certain thresholds. I'm guessing that's so new players don't bankrupt themselves trying to build everything at once. It's a good system really.
So do you start on a small plot and then "annex" land as you grow?
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There are a few traffic issues from what I have read, you can get a bug where in a 3 lane road, traffic only uses the middle lane.
quote:I am also having this issue. Have huge traffic problems at that connection.
Is there a good way to actually connect up the highway connection when you're just starting a city?
quote:This is what I do. No clue if it's the "ideal" solution though.quote:I am also having this issue. Have huge traffic problems at that connection.
Is there a good way to actually connect up the highway connection when you're just starting a city?
quote:Even just the two lane one way and making the entrance and exit further from each other should help a lot.
It wont let me build a 6 lane one way street at the beginning of the game. So what you're saying is deal with it and fix it later?
quote:Don't make the mistake I did and replace all of your industry with offices. Otherwise your commercial buildings won't be supplied with enough goods to sell.
I don't think commercial demand is 1-1 with residential, that's for sure. Looking across my city I think I have a fair amount of commercial zoned that would roughly approximate real life.
At low education levels though it's industry, industry, industry. I have a couple universities now and office zoning is picking up. The only way I've figured out how to tell the demand difference between industrial and office is to click on some industrial buildings and see if they say they have overeducated workers. In my case, most of my workers are overeducated so I'm rapidly shifting to office zoning.