Find it here — Industries DLC. The ANNO Series has the ultimate blend between being a city builder and a city management game while you play through some super interesting campaigns.
You will have to manage many different aspects to conquer ANNO , like production, supply chains, trade routes, political management and keeping your people happy. You will ultimately decide what kind of ruler you will be.
Are you a liberator or a conqueror that rules with an iron fist? Whichever you choose, be ready for an epic journey. Enjoy this city builder in singleplayer, multiplayer and sandbox mode. ANNO has visited a few different eras, both historical and future, each giving you a rich storyline which will give you hours of playtime.
What is your favourite? When you are looking for a fun city builder game that is not too serious, the Tropico series might just be perfect for you. Tropico 6 is one of the latest city building and management games for the genre, with a list of new features.
Playing the main campaigns takes you through 4 time periods all with unique ways to build your settlements:. Tropico 6 is a super fun game and you can play it in a variety of ways with several outcomes by implementing different policies, making decisions based on various factors and growing your rule in across your islands. A new feature allows you build on various small islands throughout the 4 time periods and later connect them together, which was not the case in previous titles.
Banished is a city building strategy game that lets you build and manage an isolated society. You literally start with nothing except a few people to control. The main goal of this village building game is to develop a sustaining settlement for your people to survive through the various conditions. It sounds easy enough right, but the thing is people will die if they are not fed or warm enough in the Winter.
You should order them to build, gather, farm and mine to keep your people alive. Banished has all the seasons where you will face challenges during each. Berserk's Strategy Collection. SGP's Collection. Sort by. View all tags. New itch. Subscribe for game recommendations, clips, and more. Architect Stories. A casual house-building game that combines satisfying point-and-click assembly and soothing storytelling. Lil Tribals. Build your village and recruit a community!
Studio Black Flag. Play in browser. Gather resources and build a cosy little town! Little Lands. Robin Field. Defend your home on a floating island. Gendly Games. Megaquariam is a game that's all about managing an aquarium, from hiring the best staff members to making sure your tanks are the best they can be for your fishy friends.
Some fish are bullies, while others are perfectly capable of living in harmony with one another. Others might like rocks, or plants, but mostly, they just want a bit of grub, kept at their optimal temperature, and for the glass to not be tapped. Plus, in the spirit of all those Bullfrog management games of yore, you'll also need to make sure there are lots and lots of bins. Benches, drink machines, toilets, and bins. The only things you need to keep people happy.
And the fish, of course, let's not forget the fish. Slime Rancher might look cute on the surface, but beneath its gelatinous, googly-eyed exterior lies a heart of pure chaos. Unlike the beasts you'll find in other animal management sims such as Planet Zoo or even Jurassic World Evolution, the smiling blobs of Monomi Park's farming slime 'em up excel at getting themselves into scrapes while you're off exploring and gathering resources, whether it's bouncing out of their respective pens and escaping, or accidentally eating the "plorts" or poop of other slimes and turning into all-consuming tar monsters.
If you've ever wanted to experience the anarchic world of rearing unpredictable livestock, then Slime Rancher is the management or maybe that should be wrangling? Yes, the entire economy is based around the buying and selling of slime manure, but it sure puts a jolly old face on it. It's this sunny take on the farming games that makes Slime Rancher one of more approachable management games on this list as well.
It doesn't get bogged down in the complexities of slime diets, pen conditions or anything else. All you need to do is make sure all that poop is scooped on a regular basis, because otherwise bad, bad things can happen while you're away. Still, even if you do come home to find entire sections of your farm have gone up in smoke, one look at a slime's jiggling grin is all it takes to make everything okay again.
You might be starting over, but d'awww just look at their little faces. Not every horse in Bullfrog's legendary stable of genre-defining 90s management games stands up well by today's standards, particularly in terms of interface, and that's why Themes Park or Hospital of old aren't here.
Dungeon Keeper sails close to the wind, too, but it remains fiendishly playable, especially if you install the free KeeperFX fan expansion pack which unlocks all sorts of high resolutions and assorted third-party fixes and maps.
This game is about building a monster lair, keeping said beasties happy, and ultimately hurling them at invading 'heroes'. It might be a bit daft compared to more modern games on this list, but there's a palpable loneliness to Dungeon Keeper.
Its ill-tempered creatures shuffle through dark, rocky tunnels, angrily trying to sleep in their filthy lairs, collect daily pay they have no apparent use for, tinkering away to build traps and spells that only benefit a distant employer and But that's the thing: where so many management games in the Bullfrog idiom were built around a core of pleasing people, this is, frankly, built around abusing them.
Be it the monsters who toil and fight endlessly for your gain, or the humans you murder, imprison or torture to further swell your ranks, Dungeon Keeper is a deliciously dark game in a far more profound way than its snickering voice-over. Transport Tycoon Deluxe remains one of our favourite transport management sims, even if the original is no longer available to buy on today's PC storefronts.
Thankfully, we've got OpenTTD instead, a fan-made remake of Transport Tycoon Deluxe that expands on Chris Sawyer's original by adding more map sizes as well as LAN and online multiplayer that supports up to players. The isometric countryside and urban landscapes are still beautifully tranquil in OpenTTD — despite the game's industrial core, settlements resemble picture-postcard villages and towns rather than smoggy iterations of Dickens' Coketown.
Watching the landscape develop in sync with your ambitions is as rewarding as watching a level 1 Squire become a level 50 Demigod. Business management games come in many flavours, but few offer the same kind of gentle challenges and immediately recognisable environments as this.
Transporting goods and passengers might seem like a banal occupation, especially appearing alongside future wars and theme parks, but it's the familiarity of the systems that makes the game so engaging. Where can I buy it: It's free. This red planet colonisation sim has come along way since it first came out in March Back then, it felt a little bit barebones and kept tripping over its own user interface.
Today, it's a different story. With a greater variety of domes and buildings, a more coherent UI, and the ability to link up your various fragile settlements, Surviving Mars is extremely hard to put down.
The slow growth from a handful of drones laying cables in the dust up to a thriving society of colonists is immensely satisfying, and the hostile environment and starkly limited resources means it feels like so much more an achievement than simply ordering some serfs to go build you a mansion by the river. By twinning management sim tradition with a survival mentality - your colonists need air, water and heat as well as food, and woe betide you if you fail to provide them - what could have been an old-fashioned building game becomes a thoroughly modern one.
Most management games are about indulging yourself as opposed to providing a real challenge. They're about an ever-widening circle of building possibility - the more hours you put in, the more things open up. Frostpunk is different. Frostpunk's interest is in starkly limiting what options are available to you, to the point where you're frequently making some absolutely crushing decisions about what you have to sacrifice in order to gain or fix something else.
Set during a sort of steampunk post-apocalypse, you're tasked with keeping a handful of shivering, starving refugees of a new ice age alive. There are barely any resources, and anyone who does not live close to the life-giving heat generators won't last long.
Sickness is inevitable. But you need the workers to bring in fuel and food to keep everyone else alive. Do you let the ill heal - or do you amputate? What about children? More hands on deck, or is having a childhood more important?
Frostpunk is management on the edge, where almost every decision you take - almost every building you erect - is a huge risk. It can be mastered in time, but until then, it is desperate, harrowing and a deft inversion of the usual race-to-riches approach. Theme Hospital might be the first popular management game to dwell on the dark side of profiteering, but Prison Architect is an even darker proposition.
Can you keep your inmates happy? My little farm. Heavenly Sweet Donuts. Pizza Party. Sheep Farm. Girl on Skates - Pizza Blaze. Open Restaurant. Airport Management 2. Our other sites…. Neon games. Mind Games. Solitaire Games. Action Games. Classic Games.
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