
This would be performed by clicking on the Build tab at the bottom, and then Destroy (not a logical place for it as it’s an opposite) and after clearing the land, you need to place down a bus terminal and a bus or two, and select the path in which it travels (e.g. For example, you might be asked to bulldoze some trees in order to build a bus terminal to transport citizens from one place to another. In most missions, the top-down, three-quarter view of your town lets you see the residential, rural and industrial areas - and in some cases your goals will tie all of these areas together. (Along with the main campaign is a Free Play mode you can tackle on five large "sandbox" maps to see how well you can do.)

map, including New York, Montana, California and Michigan, totalling 50 levels in all. Beginning with Colorado, players will unlock new states on the U.S. There are some building elements found in the Build-a-Lot games, but Virtual City focuses a bit more on the maintenance of that city, which includes deliveries, recycling, trading goods with other cities and handling natural (and not-so-natural) disasters that could impact your city’s residents. Your goal is to complete a number of increasingly difficult tasks to ensure the growth, prosperity and happiness of a city. G5 Entertainment’s Virtual City does a good job at delivering a challenging and attractive city building game – but it’s not a flawless sim either.


Games like HipSoft’s Build-a-Lot not only resurrected city simulations, popularized in the early ’90s with games like SimCity, but it raised the bar high for others who want to take a stab at this genre.
