From StrategyWiki, the video game walkthrough and strategy guide wiki
Revision as of 01:47, 5 June 2012 by Garrett (talk | contribs) (added game disambig for SimCity (2013))
Jump to navigation Jump to search
cleanup
cleanup

This article could use a cleanup in order to be more legible and/or presentable. Please help improve this article in any way possible. Remember to follow our editing guidelines when improving existing articles. If you can improve this page, please edit it, or help by discussing possible changes on the talk page.

If you need help with wiki markup, see the wiki markup page. If you want to try out wiki markup without damaging a page, why not use the sandbox?
Cleanup required: Content from SimCity 2000 bleeding into this guide, which may confuse readers. In addition, it's a bit heavy on describing reality.

This is the first game in the SimCity series. For other games in the series see the SimCity category.

Box artwork for SimCity.
Box artwork for SimCity.
SimCity
Developer(s)Maxis
Publisher(s)Brøderbund Software, Maxis, Electronic Arts
Year released
System(s)MS-DOS, Mac OS, Commodore 64, Commodore Amiga, Atari ST, Amstrad CPC, SNES, FM Towns, Windows, Sega Saturn, PlayStation, Nintendo 64, Acorn Archimedes, Game Boy Advance, Sinclair ZX Spectrum, EPOC32, Web browser, Wii
Followed bySimCity 2000
SeriesSimCity
Designer(s)Will Wright
Genre(s)Simulation
Players1
ModesSingle player
Rating(s)ELSPA Ages 3+ESRB Everyone
LinksOfficial websiteSimCity ChannelSearchSearch

Template:Series disambig

This guide is for the original SimCity. For the 2013 Windows game, see SimCity (2013).

SimCity is a real-time strategy and simulation city-building computer game. It is game developer Maxis' flagship product. There are four versions: the original SimCity (1989, later re-released as SimCity Classic), SimCity 2000 (1993), SimCity 3000 (1999) and SimCity 4 (2003). All of the games were re-released with various add-ons including extra scenarios. In addition, SimCity Classic is available for PalmOS and on the SimCity.com website as Classic Live. SimCity 2000 is also available for handheld organizers running Microsoft's Windows PocketPC, as well as the Game Boy Advance and PlayStation. SimCity and SimCity 2000 were also released for the SNES. There was also a SimCity 2000 3D hybrid called SimCity 64 which was released only in Japan for Nintendo 64's add-on, the 64DD. Versions of SimCity for the BBC Micro, Acorn Electron, and Acorn Archimedes computers were published by Superior Software.

Template:Continue Nav

SimCity is what many players consider a highly addictive simulation game and is even used in some Urban Planning classes. The game can be played forever as there is no end. However, many fans of the series agree that the game is very replayable.

SimCity inspired a new genre of video games, "software toys" that were open-ended with no set objective. It also led to the creation of Wright's own The Sims, which went on to be the best selling computer game of all time.

Table of Contents

edit