Close Menu
Animorphs Central – Your Ultimate Animorphs & Sci-Fi Fan HubAnimorphs Central – Your Ultimate Animorphs & Sci-Fi Fan Hub
    What's Hot

    BluPetal Launches Kickstarter for Sakura Kurihara’s Let Me Fix You Yuri Manga – News

    March 13, 2026

    The Baseus 100W Multi-Port USB Charger Packs a Handy Digital Display for Just $30

    March 13, 2026

    Journey composer Austin Wintory played an unreleased song from his canceled ‘dream job of all time’ during the Game Developers Choice Awards, just to drive home that the industry’s doing great

    March 13, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Animorphs Central – Your Ultimate Animorphs & Sci-Fi Fan HubAnimorphs Central – Your Ultimate Animorphs & Sci-Fi Fan Hub
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • Art
    • Manga
    • Books
    • Fandom
    • Reviews
    • Theories
    • Characters
    • GraphicNovels
    Animorphs Central – Your Ultimate Animorphs & Sci-Fi Fan HubAnimorphs Central – Your Ultimate Animorphs & Sci-Fi Fan Hub
    Home»Reviews»‘Brutally honest’ city builder Microlandia gets brutally honest crime simulation: ‘It’s a spectrum of consequences that can become a death spiral every single day’
    Reviews

    ‘Brutally honest’ city builder Microlandia gets brutally honest crime simulation: ‘It’s a spectrum of consequences that can become a death spiral every single day’

    animorphscentralBy animorphscentralJanuary 26, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email Copy Link
    Follow Us
    Google News Flipboard
    A screenshot of a newspaper generated in Microlandia, with the headline "Petty Thieves Go Big" and an image of a police car.
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Most city-builders are creative toolsets with an optional management sim attached, canvasses for the imagination with a budget you might glance at occasionally. But Microlandia is built different. The city-builder developed by Information Superhighway Games is designed to be “brutally honest”. Roads are expensive, traffic jams can cost your citizens their jobs, and uncontrolled rent prices can trigger a homelessness crisis.

    One area where Microlandia wasn’t quite so forthright, however, was crime. Illegal activity was only simulated in the broadest terms within textureless cityscapes. But that’s all changed. Microlandia’s recently released update 1.5 makes crime vastly more complicated and, as a consequence, vastly more challenging.

    In a Steam post, ISG introduces the update in characteristically bold fashion: “Cities are not clockwork, they are chaos machines with a mayor attached. Most of what breaks your plans is not the ordinary day, it is the ugly little surprise that arrives precisely because you acted as if it could not,” the studio writes. “Version 1.5 leans into that reality: crime is no longer a single checkbox; it’s a spectrum of consequences that can become a death spiral every single day.”


    Related articles

    Microlandia 1.0 Trailer – YouTube

    Watch On

    The update breaks down crime into seven different categories, namely armed robbery, break-in, larceny, destruction, grand theft auto, violence, and major crime. These crimes can affect your profitability at different levels, from individual residents, through specific businesses, right up to kicking your entire city in the swag sack.

    More complex crime brings with it more complex law enforcement. Players can now build a police HQ that houses 50 cops, who will patrol and respond to crimes within a specific radius of the building. The update also reworks police brains to produce “smarter” behaviour, with officers making “realistic decisions about where to patrol and how to respond to incidents.”

    All of this is apparently propped up by a rigid “statistical backbone”. ISG says that Microlandia’s crime frequency, police clearance rates, and zonal moving out behaviour are all modelled according to real-world publications on the subject, like the FBI’s Crime in the Nation statistics from 2023, and Laura Dugan’s 1999 paper ‘The Effect of Criminal Victimization on a Household’s Moving Decision’. I love it when a developer shows their working.

    Alongside its major crime revision, update 1.5 makes some more general changes to Microlandia. Players can now build movie theatres, vineyards, premium condos, and two-storey houses. Both the UI and visuals have been given a clarity pass, and performance has been improved so that “large cities should feel less like punishment.”

    Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

    Microlandia continues to be a fascinating project. If you fancy giving it a go yourself, you can grab it on Steam for a very reasonable $7 (£5.89).

    Brutally builder City consequences crime day death honest Microlandia simulation single spectrum spiral
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    animorphscentral

      Related Posts

      Journey composer Austin Wintory played an unreleased song from his canceled ‘dream job of all time’ during the Game Developers Choice Awards, just to drive home that the industry’s doing great

      March 13, 2026

      Two laugh-out-loud moments in Zero Parades gave me hope that the Disco Elysium successor will still deliver flashes of brilliance

      March 13, 2026

      Marathon got deadlier overnight, and some think yesterday’s sound change is the culprit

      March 12, 2026
      Add A Comment
      Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

      Economy News

      BluPetal Launches Kickstarter for Sakura Kurihara’s Let Me Fix You Yuri Manga – News

      By March 13, 2026

      Campaign launched on Thursday, already reached goal & several stretch goals for Kurihara’s other short…

      The Baseus 100W Multi-Port USB Charger Packs a Handy Digital Display for Just $30

      March 13, 2026

      Journey composer Austin Wintory played an unreleased song from his canceled ‘dream job of all time’ during the Game Developers Choice Awards, just to drive home that the industry’s doing great

      March 13, 2026
      Top Trending

      Hallway Minus Yeet: Animorphs Book 47

      By animorphscentralJanuary 26, 2026

      Joseph here, yes I know that Book 47 is titled “The Resistance”.…

      Brooklyn Museum’s Latest Exhibition Blends Art, Fashion And Science

      By animorphscentralJanuary 26, 2026

      Brooklyn, NY, USA – May 1 2024: The entrance to the Brooklyn…

      Billionaire Adam Weitsman Acquires A Rare Nakamigos NFT

      By animorphscentralJanuary 26, 2026

      Join Our Telegram channel to stay up to date on breaking news…

      Subscribe to News

      Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

      About us

      Welcome to Animorphs Central, a fan-focused website dedicated to the world of Animorphs and science fiction storytelling.

      Animorphs Central was created for fans who love exploring alien species, epic battles, unforgettable characters, and the deeper lore of the Animorphs universe.

      Hallway Minus Yeet: Animorphs Book 47

      January 26, 2026

      Brooklyn Museum’s Latest Exhibition Blends Art, Fashion And Science

      January 26, 2026

      Billionaire Adam Weitsman Acquires A Rare Nakamigos NFT

      January 26, 2026

      Subscribe to Updates

      Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

      Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
      • About Us
      • Disclaimer
      • Get In Touch
      • Privacy Policy
      • Terms and Conditions
      © 2026 animorphscentral.blog. Designed by Pro.

      Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.