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See All Specials. Featured Bundle. View all. You have many options for colors and styles, and it's a very calming experience overall. Townscaper has come into its own as a tool for those who wish to use their manufactured towns as set pieces in their tabletop games. It lets you make a town exactly as you need it in exactly the configurations you need. The SimCity franchise has been around a long time. The first entry in the series dates back almost 30 years.
It is essentially the grandfather of all city-building games and paved the way no pun intended for many games to come. These titles are still relevant in the gaming sphere, extending from PC and consoles to find a new home on mobile devices. It may not be the most innovative title on this list, but the formula they created is still solid today and definitely worth your time. You can even check out the final entry in the series, SimCity: Buildit , for free on your favorite mobile device.
Medieval Dynasty is an odd one where rather than being some omniscient figure dictating where buildings are built and what your residents do, you are instead just some guy who dictates where buildings are built and what your residents do. The settlement building features of this game are incredibly fun to interact with and they turn the game from a simple survival game with a generations system into something far grander.
While this title is currently in Early Access, Foundation is a very promising medieval-era city builder from Polymorph Games who proudly advertise their game's lack of a grid and focus on the procedural nature of settlement building.
The game is very good at emulating what it must have felt like to manage a medieval settlement, with many events being out of your hands and the enforcement of a reactive rather than proactive gameplay style.
In addition to that, the game has a thriving modding community sure to extend the title's lifespan many years. If your greatest goal in life is to gain favor with a Nordic God and earn your place in Valhalla, have we got a game for you! Valhalla Hills is a throwback to the popular Settlers games in which players will build settlements in an attempt to earn favor with Odin. If you're looking for a more laid-back city-building experience, this is one we highly recommend.
The colorful, cartoonish art style is appealing and there is less of a focus on combat than some of our other titles. You will need to fight for resources with the local Dwarven population and there are some monsters to contend with, but for the most part, you can focus on expanding your Nordic empire. Urban Empire is a city-building sim that takes a slightly different approach. Rather than focusing on the building aspect, Urban Empire tasks you with furthering your civilization through diplomacy.
You spend the bulk of your time competing for votes and favor among your citizen. You will build relationships as frequently as you destroy them, all the while researching ways to improve life in your empire.
This entry is for players keen to witness the unraveling of a " historical family drama" rather than participate in a true strategy game. If space colonies are more your thing, Surviving Mars is a great option to feed the explorer in you. You will begin your journey on Mars, which is currently a barren wasteland. Luckily, the game provides all the tools required to make it habitable.
This title is not for the faint of heart, however. You will be battling the deadly atmosphere, lack of oxygen, and infertile land, making your job all the more difficult. After you've established a livable settlement, you will start attracting humans to your colony. It is now your job to ensure their survival and trust us, it's not easy. Get ready to micro-manage! In Aven Colony, players will face a barrage of alien abnormalities as they try to establish their otherworldly civilizations.
Alien plagues, extreme weather, and hostile species await you as you attempt to carve out your own little corner of space. Your job as overseer is to ensure the survival of your citizens. This involves mining minerals for resources, building hospitals, and maintaining order.
Once your city is stable, the game then introduces bigger goals to entice you further. Wing of Liberty takes place four years after Brood War , and previous Terran hero Jim Raynor has organized a rebellion to overthrow the Dominion Emperor.
Heart of the Swarm focuses on the Zerg, and the trilogy of plots ends with the Protoss focused Legacy of the Void. The original game has 29 campaign missions, making for a lengthy and enjoyable campaign that is further fleshed out by the expansions.
The real action comes with multi-player, though. The servers are still alive and robust, so you can still easily jump in play anyone from around the world. Warcraft III is a prime example of the RTS genre is all about as players explore a large map, build up their compounds, and use troops to fend off and attack opposing faction.
It also introduces new elements that would go on to become staples of the genre. Creeps, for example, are enemies that are dangerous to all factions, and they add a nice wild card element to the encounters.
Warcraft III also introduces heroes, super-powered units with special abilities, which melded well with the high fantasy setting and plot of the game. All in all it makes for a game that still plays well, and it is perfect for old and new fans alike. The game Total Annihilation is a fan favorite in the RTS community, so naturally Supreme Commander was well-received as a spiritual successor to the landmark title.
It has its own unique mechanics and style that separate it from its roots, and it is still a favorite for RTS fans even today. Supreme Commander is unique because - rather being a faceless commander - players actually assume the role of a giant mech that is tasked to build its base, upgrade units, and defeat its opponents. Like Total Annihilation before it, giving the commander a unique presence in the game adds to the depth and stakes of combat.
If the Supreme Commander is destroyed in combat, the game is over. The game also has a decently complex technology system, with every building and unit being broken into one of four tiers. Players can upgrade these units into different tiers over time or invest resources into unique experimental technology.
Combat in Supreme Commander is also varied and massive in scope. Players can create land, air, and water based units, making full-fledged skirmishes epic to watch play out.
Supreme Commander also lets you enjoy this combat thanks to its relatively hands off approach to micromanagement. Supreme Commander is still running today, and for good reason. The franchise perfectly blended the complex management of the genre with flashy action to make a game that was accessible and appealing to a wider audience.
As such, the series also has a lot of nostalgia surrounding it. Luckily, Command and Conquer Remastered holds onto everything players loved about the games while updating the visuals for a modern aesthetic and improving the flow of the UI. It really is the best of both worlds. Everything about the game has been remastered. The visuals are tweaked for 4K, making the individual sprites more legible and coherent. The music has also been remastered for a fuller experience.
Even the full-motion video has been upscaled, but that has only heightened the goofiness rather than improved it. If you are hankering for the old school look and feel, though, that is available to you. Simply tapping the space bar switches the visuals for a truly original experience. The setting are also robust so you can combine features from the original and remastered versions to create the ultimate experience for yourself. This series was one of the top games in the height of the genre, and even today has plenty of hardcore fans.
Age of Empires II is widely considered one of the best in the series, and the new definitive edition brings the classic game into the modern era with a 4K resolution and remastered soundtrack.
There are plenty of reasons why this is the definitive edition of Age of Empires II. It gets the usual remaster treatment with improved visuals and sound, but content is king in this remaster. Not only does the definitive edition bring together all the original expansions, but it also includes the new The Last Khans expansion with four new civilizations and subsequent campaigns.
That means you get all the content fans know and love, plus more to entice new and old fans alike. The AI has also been greatly improved from the original game. The original AI had to break the rules to get ahead, whereas the definitive edition has a more sophisticated algorithm to keep up with players. Players can choose between the classic and new AI based on their preferences. Age of Empires II is a massive game, especially with all of its expansions.
Plenty of RTS games are based on history and do their best to accurately depict historic conflicts. Players will use realistic tactics to out-maneuver their enemies, and the realistic engine has incredible physics and destructible environments to make the conflict all the more real.
Resources in the game are a little more streamlined than other RTS titles, but add to the central focus of war. Players will collect munition and fuel credits to create troops, capture strongholds, and pushback their enemies. The combat is more or less standard RTS affair, though Company of Heroes 2 introduces some interesting new elements.
The game features TrueSight, a new line-of-sight feature to create realistic visibility for combat. Weather also plays a huge role as well and can negatively affect units in certain conditions. If you are a huge history buff and love strategic combat, Company of Heroes 2 is a great option for you. Along with the board game and expansions, Games Workshops publishes fiction and audiobooks through the Black Library, and they have collaborated on several video games in the Warhammer universe.
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