Almost every detail is well taken care of and is expressed as much as possibly could. The game world is gorgeous, first things first. As you progress to the tutorials that require more manual control and is time-sensitive, you start to get the gist on how time affects the game, and how well you manage it will be the definitive rise or fall of your tropical haven. The tutorials were fairly straight forward and simple as the tasks given to you were pretty easy to pull off and mainly guided. The game does well in teaching first timers the basic controls of the cameras and how the camera would behave given that in some situations you would need to either pan, scroll or tilt your camera to make sure you have a good view on what your cursor is pointing at. Not knowing what I would be getting myself into, I started off the game by going through the basic tutorials. I always have this implication that sim games using the controller would be tedious and cumbersome. I for one have never tried on a sim game on the console before. Every other game has their own aspects and approach to how they make their simulators unique, and Tropico 6 has done a very good job despite the criticism sim games have had when played on consoles. Other games such Cities: Skylines and the Civilization series have come close to being contenders for the spot of the king of city-building and economically thriving games in the past years but the Tropico series have held their own when compared with these other series. Since its launch on the PC back in March, Tropico 6 has been a staple of city-building simulation together with its predecessors in previous years. Developed by: Limbic Entertainment Published by: Kalypso Media Platforms: PC / PS4 / Xbox One Reviewed on: PS4 Pro
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |