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SimCity 5 Societies - What has changed?
Filed in archive Game Previews by Kevin Codamon on June 8, 2007
As we have reported here at pc gamers blog, the next iteration in the venerable Simcity series will indeed be called Simcity Societies. But there are many changes that may shock longtime players (like me):

Update: Incidentally, Read Tilted Mill's President Chris Beatrice reaction to widespread worry that "teh Simcity franchise is d00m3d!". I toldya im not alone on this. But to be fair with Tilted Mill, i think we should be giving them constructive feedback and play the final build before we ultimately judged if this was a bad move.

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#1 -- For the first time in the franchise's history, an in-house team at Maxis/EA isn't developing the game. At the helm of SimCity Societies is Tilted Mill, the folks behind Caesar IV and the sleeper society-builder Immortal Cities: Children of the Nile. Why isn't Maxis working on it? The answer's simple: Will Wright and his team are busy with Spore. But Rod Humble, the head of EA's Sims division, handpicked the Tilted Mill guys, and its previous city-building successes makes the developer an inspired choice.


Now, im worried
. no disrespect to Tilted Mill but im sure a lot of Simcity players will be feeling the same way. I just hope that they keep the essence of Simcity and the polish inherent in any Will Wright game.



#2 -- By SimCity creator Will Wright's own admission, previous SimCity games had become too complex for most. Tilted Mill is focusing on scaling back the complexity and micromanagement of latter entries like SimCity 4 -- no pipes to lay, no power grids, no manual emergency-response funds to disperse, no individual building-funding. The series' hardcore fans shouldn't worry that the game will no longer be recognizable or too easy. "We are not out to fix something that's broken," promises lead designer Chris Beatrice.

#3 -- As the working title implies, Societies adds a new layer of emphasis on the city's citizens. The game introduces six "social energies" (such as Wealth or Obedience) that influence your city's look and feel. Buildings and aesthetics change depending on how these six values develop. Focus on Obedience, for example, and your buildings will start automatically adding security cameras to monitor your citizens' movements, Orwellian-style. Different energy balances unlock different building types, too.

#4 -- The standard SimCity "adviser" system is gone. Societies aims to communicate your city's well-being through goals and the city's overall atmosphere -- and your citizens' behavior. Sims (yes, they're using that term) will skip work if they're in a bad mood or start engaging in criminal activity (such as vandalization). Your actions in the game -- what you choose to build -- will also influence the kinds of goals the game presents. Head down an Obedience path, for example, and the game will start giving you goals to usher your progress in that direction.

#5 -- Goal-oriented sandbox gameplay: Instead of giving you a handful of typical scenarios, this SimCity awards new buildings and bonuses for meeting certain goals during the course of normal gameplay. With only about 15 percent of the buildings unlocked from the get-go, that's a lot of game to wade through.


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Permalink: SimCity 5 Societies - What has changed?
Tags: SimCity  5  Societies  tilted  mill  developer  ea  maxis  will  wright  game  simcity+societies 
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