![]() ![]() When elections roll around, you can make a speech acknowledging your shortcomings and promising to do better. It’s also pretty clear, without even having to go into the exhaustive almanac (which details everything you need to know about your citizens and economy) when people are dissatisfied with how things are going. ![]() It’s a delicate, but brilliantly intuitive and fluid balancing act. Likewise, skimping on the maintenance budget for an apartment block might gain bigger profits on the rental yields, but will infuriate the people living there. Since every building can set an individual budget, if you pay workers more, they’ll work more efficiently, and empty job positions get filled quicker, but this, in turn, requires you to keep an eye on your jobless population as you might not have enough people with the right educational qualifications. Similarly, if your jewelry factory is sitting idle while your gold mine has a big shiny pile of nuggets piled up in the front, it’s a sign you don’t have enough teamsters to get goods where they need to go. Similarly, if you’re not seeing an armada of little boats between islands in your archipelago, it’s a sign you’ve forgotten to build landings where your people can row out across the waters. You can see them all walking around, going to work, going to church, popping down to the restaurant or scurrying off into the jungle to take up arms against their repressive government!Īs such, it’s easy to see when one of your industrial buildings is barely getting any work done because its workers have to commute on foot across the entire island to get there! This means you might have to put down a bus stop so employees can more smoothly get between where they work and where they live. The micromanagement in the game feels so incredibly intuitive precisely because everything is so visual. Enjoyably, I also noticed that now when you click on one of your subjects, they’ll give a line of dialogue that reflects their current mood. ![]() Every person on your little island has their own thoughts, desires and political beliefs. My first impressions of Tropico 6 were that it was – as the last few games have been – a glacial evolution on what has come before. I made mine look a bit like Walter White, not that my Presidente would ever resort to murdering his enemies and amassing mounds of illegal cash! You can design your presidente’s appearance in a handy editor. ![]()
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