![]() For those who love creating perfectly beautiful laid-out cities with symmetrical gardens, it makes a world of difference to be able to make the designs match. Rather than just having a random garden design appear, you can choose the exact style, similar to selecting statues. One thing I particularly appreciated is that you can toggle the garden selection. ![]() Clicking on people will still get you a little soundbite of their voice, something I used to find so funny as a kid (I don’t know why), so I love that the remake kept it. The detailed world was always one of the biggest charms of the original series, and seeing it again brought back so many memories. When I first booted it up, it felt like I saw the game exactly how I remembered, with the sandy landscape, the Nile flooding, ostriches running wild, and little people rushing in to build their homes. However, Pharaoh: A New Era, a remake of 1999’s Pharaoh, is set to change my top choice. When I have a city-building craving it’s still my go-to, even 12 years later. While I enjoyed most of the games - sorry Caesar 4, you aren’t included - my favourite was Zeus: Master of Olympus, as it benefitted from that extra polish that came from being one of the later titles to launch. ![]() We all have comfort games we turn to when we fancy taking a break from shiny new titles and for me, that means the City Building ancient city sim series. ![]()
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