
The forester needs someplace to store his wood so you build a stockpile.

Granaries require wood to build, so you build a forester to chop and plant trees. Residents need food to live so you build farms to cater to them and granaries to store the food in. You lay down paths and homes, and homes attract residents. You start on a bucolic island by plopping down a castle, and from there the normal balancing act of competing needs spills forth. Kingdoms and Castles drives home this sensation even further by boiling away so much of the grander complexity of its genre-mates. They are absorbing but low-pressure, and the reward is normally a bustling ant farm of activity. I love losing hours to tweaking my road networks in Cities: Skylines, and building out new neighbourhoods in Sim City 4 or even SimCity. I understand it even better after a weekend playing Kingdoms and Castles, a city building game in which you click buildings together to make a pretty picture appear.Īll city builders, on some level, offer this source of relaxation for me.

I can easily imagine the relaxation to be found in sitting at a kitchen table with a family member, the radio on, and clicking together shapes to make a pretty picture appear.

I don't build jigsaws, but I understand grownups that do.
