==========================
About this document...
==========================
This document was created using Microsoft Word 2003 for Windows with a width of
6 5/8 inches in 10 pt "Courier New" font, 79 characters per line. This document
is best viewed using Mozilla Firefox 1.5 or later, with a screen resolution
setting of at least 800 x 600 pixels. If you are experiencing difficulty in
viewing this document, try adjusting your screen settings for better results.
I created this document because I felt that it would lead to the overall
benefit of those who are in need of assistance in regards to SimCity 2000.
====================
About E-mails...
====================
If you have any questions that have gone unanswered here, you may e-mail me at
the address above (Benjer AT gmail DOT com).
PLEASE MAKE SURE THAT "SC2K" (w/o quotations) IS IN THE SUBJECT, OT YOUR
MESSAGE MAY BE DELETED. ONCE AGAIN, THAT IS "SC2K" TO BE IN THE SUBJECT.
Also, let me know if there are any huge factual errors in the guide (ignore
spelling and grammar errata), or if someone has posted this guide outside of
the websites listed in the legal section.
========================
Table of Contents...
========================
HOW TO USE: Following each section heading will be a code whose letters are
separated by spaces EX: (L G L). To go immediately to a certain section, press
Ctrl + F to bring up the Find Window. Enter the code without parentheses or
spaces (but keep letters capitalized) to go immediately to that section. Make
sure that search options for case-sensitive and whole word only are selected.
These codes may appear elsewhere, as sort of a cross-reference.
---Note---
Not all subsections (i.e. 3.2, 4.5, etc.) are include in the ToC. I have
omitted those I fee do not warrant mentioning.
Also, the headers for subsections do not necessarily follow the same format. I
have formatted the headers in a manner I felt was appropriate for the section
in which it appeared.
2.1 What You'll See (W Y S)
2.2 File Menu (F L E)
2.3 Speed Menu (S P D)
2.4 Options Menu (O P N)
2.5 Disasters Menu (D S T)
2.6 Windows Menu (W N D)
2.7 Newspapers Menu (N W S)
2.8 Help Menu (H L P)
2.9 City Toolbar (C T B)
2.10 Terrain Editor (T R E)
3 The Disasters (D S S)
3.1 Fire
3.2 Flood
3.3 Air Crash
3.4 Tornado
3.5 Earthquake
3.6 Monster
3.7 Hurricane
3.8 Rioters
3.9 Melt Down
3.10 Microwave
3.11 Volcano
3.12 Fire Storm
3.13 Mass Riots
3.14 Major Flood
3.15 Toxic Spill
4 The Windows (W N S)
4.1 Budget Window (B G T)
4.2 Ordinances Window (O D N)
4.3 Population Window (P L N)
4.4 Industry Window (I N Y)
4.5 Graphs Window (G R P)
4.6 Neighbors Window (N G H)
4.7 Maps Window (M P A)
5 Behind the Software (S F T)
5.1 Neighboring Cities
5.2 The Newspapers
5.3 The City Council
5.4 "What's it called?"
5.5 Viewing the Version Info
5.6 "About SimCity 2000..."
6 Strategies (S T R)
6.1 Starting & Designing (S R T)
6.2 Maintaining the City (M T N)
6.3 Dealing with Scenarios (S C S)
7 Tricks and Cheats (T T C)
7.1 Tricks (T R K)
7.2 Cheats (C H T)
7.3 Easter Eggs (E A G)
7.4 The Debug Menu
7.5 The Fund Trick
7.6 The "Floating Mountain" Trick
Before we go on, let me tell you about what you'll find in some of the
sections.
Section 1 introduces you to the game and what the game does.
Section 2 will list the controls/functions etc. for SC2K. Whatever can be done
in the simulator, this section will describe it. Basically, all the technical
knowledge you need will be found here.
Section 3 describes all of the disasters, and the methods for dealing with
them.
Section 4 explains each window in SC2K, and the meaning of the information
these windows present.
Section 5 covers the "behind the scenes" aspect of SC2K. The information you
find here doesn't necessarily have any relevance, since it's mostly subjective.
In fact, this section is really meant for satiating curiosity more than
anything else.
Section 6 is where you'll find all the strategies for playing SC2K; things like
how to design your city, dealing with crime, pollution, etc. All the skills
needed to be a successful mayor are found here. This is basically the flip side
of Section 2.
Section 7 has all the tricks and cheats you'll ever need. Come here to learn
about ways to work around the simulator, or to simply look up cheats and be on
your way.
Section 8 is full of links and materials that will assist you with SC2K.
Together, they contain a wealth of knowledge over a wide range of subjects.
SimCity 2000 is a creation of Maxis (under Electronic Arts), and individually,
the brainchild of Will Wright. Mr. Wright has achieved such fame within the
Maxis world that he cameos in several post-SC2K releases, including SC3K and
The Sims.
SimCity 2000 (hereafter referred to as "SC2K") was originally released for the
Macintosh in 1993 then later released for DOS and Windows. At the time, SC2K
pushed the processing power of computers to the max, which - by today's
standards - is rather paltry.
SC2K was later released for the SNES followed by releases for the PlayStation,
Saturn, OS/2 and Pocket PC (there are probably other versions I have failed to
mention). In 2003, SC2K was also released for the GameBoy Advance. While I will
not go in-depth regarding the non-PC versions, I will try to include what I
know about them whenever I feel it's pertinent. This should be considered a
Windows-focused document, although some information regarding the Mac and DOS
versions appears frequently throughout (the cheats section also has codes for
every system I could find).
As the sequel to SimCity Classic, SC2K was something like no one has ever seen,
and to this day it remains a fun and addicting game.
====================================
Section 1.1: System Requirements
====================================
I just thought I'd go ahead and include this information, as listed on the back
of the SC2K SE CD-ROM. After all, there might be some who actually need to make
sure their machines can handle the game. For the rest of you, it gives you an
idea of what was considered "top-of-the-line" just over 10 years ago...
DOS, IBM or 100% Compatible, 486 or above REQUIRES: MS-DOS 5.0 & above; 8MB
free RAM, mouse, hard disk; SVGA card (with 512k video RAM); double-speed CD-
ROM drive. SUPPORTS: Most popular sound cards and printers.
WINDOWS IBM or 100% Compatible, 486 or above REQUIRES: Windows 3.1; 8MB RAM
(requires Virtual Memory). Other requirements same as for DOS. SUPPORTS: All
Windows-compatible sound cards and printers.
WINDOWS 95 IBM or 100% Compatible, 486 or Above, 66 MHz or Above. REQUIRES:
Windows 95. Other requirements same as for Windows. SUPPORTS: All Windows-
compatible sound cards and printers.
===========================================
Section 1.2: The Philosophy of the Game
===========================================
When it comes to SC2K, it's all about building your dream city. This game gives
you the chance to exert deity-like powers over a society of Sims. With this
power, you can do pretty much as you wish. You come in as the mayor of whatever
city you wish to control. It can be a pre-made city, a scenario, or something
of your own design. You can create your own Heaven or Hell, your own paradise
or despot, or anything in between. One of the wonderful aspects of SC2K is that
you are literally given free reign over your creations.
Maybe you want to build the largest city. Good luck, the record stands at 9.3
million Sims. Maybe you'll opt for a more scenic M.O. and design your dream
city. Try your hand at any of the challenging scenarios or cause a few
disasters of your own. Watch your city grow and prosper as you build more and
more. Or, you can watch it collapse and decay as you play the Corrupt Mayor.
Take a spin at recreating your hometown, SimCity style or design a city that's
out of this world. The possibilities are endless.
======================================
Section 2.1: What You'll See WYS
======================================
When you start SC2K, you'll be presented with a small "in-flight movie" (that
is, assuming you have the disc in the drive). Otherwise, you'll come to the
main screen with these options available*:
*There are other options that might appear depending on what additional
software you have installed, i.e. SCURK.
The first two options take you directly to the city simulator, with the latter
prompting you for some information first.
The third option takes you to the terrain editor.
The fourth option opens a menu that lets you choose which scenario you'd like
to play.
The last will close the program.
When you're in the simulator window, you're going to see a few objects of
interest.
First is the menu bar, which contains many of the important tasks you can
perform in SC2K that are related to information and city maintenance.
Above that is the title bar which, along with the name of the program, will
display the following information:
[Mmm YYYY $$,$$$]
So, an example would be:
[Jan 2441 $24,397]
If the program has been minimized, you'll also see this information in the task
bar. Additionally, if a disaster has occurred, the task will flash.
Floating to the left will be the City Toolbar, which contains all the tools you
need for building your city, as well as many buttons that perform the same
tasks as some of the options in the menu bar.
If you're playing the DOS version, you'll also see a small box that displays
various bits of data. In it, there will be a small icon indicating the current
weather, along with any current weather alerts, if any. Also displayed in this
box will any alerts relating to the city, the current tool in use, and the cost
of that tool, if applicable. If the game is paused, this is also shown in the
box.
In Windows, this box is replaced by a status bar at the bottom of the screen,
split into 3 sections. The leftmost section shows the current tool in use and
its cost, if applicable. The middle section indicates any status alerts with
the city, and also if the game is paused. The rightmost section displays the
current weather information.
---SNES Note---
This version of SC2K also displays the actual weather (i.e. clouds, rain, etc)
along with the text description.
The main feature, of course, is the actual city. You have an aerial, isometric
view of the city. This is also where you'll actually work on the city. It's
displayed in real time and can be viewed from four different angles, in several
degrees of zoom. Additionally, a variety of filters and varying views can be
applied, all of which are discussed in either section 2.9, City Toolbar (C T B)
or 4.7, Maps Window (M P A).
===================================
Section 2.2 The File Menu FLE
===================================
Here is where you'll find all your typical file menu operations.
2.2.1 Load City:
==================
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+L
DOS Shortcut: Alt-L
This does exactly what it says it does. Selecting this takes you to a window
which lets you choose any available *.SC2 file for opening. Also, you can
select a *.CTY file (SimCity Classic) to be converted to a SC2K file. This
feature is discussed in more depth in Section 7 (T T C).
2.2.2 New City:
=================
Windows Hotkey: Ctrl+N
DOS Shortcut: Alt-N
This selection will open up a new *.SC2 file. A window will pop up asking you
to name your city, select a date, and a level of difficulty.
You can choose to start your city in the years 1900, 1950, 2000, or 2050. You
can also choose to start your city with either $20,000, $10,000, or a $10,000
bond with a 3% interest rate (have fun with that one...)
As for naming your city, it varies from version to version.
- Win95: 256 characters or less.
- Win3.1 & DOS: 30 characters for the actual city name, the first 8 of which
comprise the file name.
2.2.3 Edit New Map:
=====================
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+E
DOS Shortcut: Alt-E
This selection will open up the SC2K terrain editor. Here, you can select
various options by which to edit your terrain before starting a new city on it.
This feature is discussed in Section 2.9 (T R E).
2.2.4 Load Scenario:
======================
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+Z
DOS Shortcut: Alt-Z
This selection opens up a menu in which you'll find a variety of different
cities you can start up. Unlike regular SC2K files, these cities have built-in
scenarios which you must complete in order to receive the key to the city. Fail
and you'll be booted. More info in Section 6 (S T R).
2.2.5 Load Tile Set: (appears in Windows version only)
======================
Shortcuts: None
This option will only appear if you have the SIMCITY URBAN RENEWAL KIT (SCURK)
installed.
Selecting it brings up a window which lets you select from a variety of tile
sets created in SCURK to give your city a different appearance. Tile sets will
ONLY change the appearance of your city, and nothing else.
SCURK is available separately, or both SC2K and SCURK can be purchased together
on the SC2K SE CD-ROM.
2.2.6 Save City:
==================
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+S
DOS Shortcut: Alt-S
One of the more important commands, it's imperative that you save your city
frequently. Failing to do so can lead to many problems, especially in the rare
circumstance that SC2K glitches and sends your city to electronic oblivion. In
any case, it's easy enough to save, so be sure to do so often. When you save
for the first time, you'll be asked to name the file and decide where to put
it. Afterward, each save will result in a pop-up that tells you that your city
has been saved and the location it has been saved to.
---PlayStation Note---
Even though most of these functions are entirely different in the PlayStation
version, and some of them don't even apply, I felt it was necessary to mention
that saving a file in the PlayStation version takes a rather long time.
2.2.7 Save City As...:
========================
Shortcuts: None
This is the same as the previous command, except that you must also specify a
filename and a directory in which to save. This is useful for creating back-up
copies of cities.
2.2.8 Exit: ("Quit" in DOS)
=============
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+X
DOS Shortcut: Alt-Q
This command will take you out of SC2K, before which you'll always be prompted
to save your city, even if you've just saved and haven't made any changes.
=================================
Section 2.3: The Speed Menu SPD
=================================
This menu lets you control the speed at which the simulator will run.
2.3.1 Pause:
==============
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+P
DOS Shortcut: Alt-P
This command will pause your city, letting you construct, demolish, zone, etc.
in relative peace. It's also useful when disasters occur and you need to catch
your breath or find out exactly what's going on.
2.3.2 Turtle:
===============
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+1
DOS Shortcut: Alt-1
This is the slowest speed setting available in SC2K. At this speed, time will
pass at a rate of 1 month per 20 seconds or so in the Windows version, and a
few seconds faster in the DOS version.
2.3.3 Llama:
==============
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+2
DOS Shortcut: Alt-2
This is the next fastest speed available in SC2K. This city will progress at a
rate of 1 month per 10 seconds or so in the Windows version. The DOS version
will progress about twice as fast.
2.3.4 Cheetah:
================
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+3
DOS Shortcut: Alt-3
This is the next fastest speed in SC2K, and it's also the fastest speed in the
DOS version. In the Windows version, a month will pass every 5 seconds or so.
In the DOS version, about 2-3 months pass each second.
2.3.5 African Swallow: (available only in the Windows version)
========================
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+4
DOS Shortcut: N/A
This is the fastest setting available in the Windows version of SC2K. Unlike
the other speed settings in SC2K, this speed is limited only by your computer's
processing power, thus the rate varies greatly among different computers. On my
Dell Dimension 2100 with a P3 and 256 MB RAM, the fastest speed I've seen is
about 6 months per second. When I minimize the window, the speed skyrockets to
1 century every 13 seconds.
=======================================
Section 2.4: The Options Menu OPN
=======================================
This menu contains a few options that let you adjust certain behaviors of the
simulator.
There are no shortcuts for items in this menu.
2.4.1 Auto-Budget:
====================
This is an option you can select to have the simulator automatically make the
necessary deposits/withdrawals from your budget. When this is unselected, the
Budget Window will pop up once a year so you can keep tabs on your spending.
2.4.2 Auto-Goto:
==================
Select this option if you want the window to automatically center around an
important event. For example, if a certain building catches fire, having this
option selected will cause the simulator window to go to that event
immediately. This is generally pretty useful, but there are instances when
you'll want to turn it off (particularly during an earthquake).
2.4.3 Sound Effects:
======================
This enables you to turn the sound effects on or off. On some DOS machines,
this will actually result in a noticeable improvement in speed.
2.4.4 Music:
==============
This option lets you determine whether or not you want to hear that classic and
catchy SC2K music. It's okay to turn it off. You aren't going to hurt anyone's
feelings if you do.
=========================================
Section 2.5: The Disasters Menu DST
=========================================
This is where you can choose what kind of disaster you would like to subject
your unfortunate Sims to. You may choose from one of the following:
- Fire
- Flood
- Air Crash
- Tornado
- Earthquake
- Monster
- Hurricane
- Rioters
At the bottom, there is an option (No Disasters) for turning disasters on or
off. Selecting this option will prevent random disasters from occurring. For a
more complete explanation of disasters and their effects, go to Section 3 (D S
S).
=======================================
Section 2.6: The Windows Menu WND
=======================================
This menu lets you open a variety of windows that display various data from the
simulator.
These windows are explained in much more depth in Section 4 (W N S). There are
no DOS shortcuts for the options in this menu.
2.6.1 Budget:
===============
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+B
Opens the Budget Window, where you can control the various aspects of your
budget such as expenditures, taxes, etc.
2.6.2 Ordinances:
===================
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+O
Opens the Ordinances Window. Here you can select or deselect various ordinances
which have a variety of impacts on your city.
2.6.3 Population:
===================
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+C
Opens the Population Window. This is where you can view information regarding
the work force, average intelligence and some other demographic data.
2.6.4 Industry:
=================
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+I
Opens the Industry Window, where you can control specific industry taxes, and
see the supply/demand of the various industries. (i.e. Textiles, Food, Media,
etc.)
2.6.5 Graphs:
===============
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+G
Opens the Graphs Window. Here you can view a variety of city information in
graphical form over various time spans.
2.6.6 Neighbors:
==================
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+H
Opens the Neighbors Window. This is where you can look at the population of
your neighbors in comparison with the population of your own city.
2.6.7 Maps:
=============
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+M
Opens the Maps Window. This window will display information about your city
superimposed over the city map.
==========================================
Section 2.7: The Newspapers Menu NWS
==========================================
Here you can select which newspaper you'd like to read. Also, you can choose
whether or not you want a twice-yearly subscription, or you can choose to have
only the important events brought to your attention. If a disaster occurs,
you'll always receive a paper about it, regardless of your selections here. As
your city increases in population, the number of available newspapers increases
from 1 to 6. More information on newspapers is available in Section 5 (S F T).
====================================
Section 2.8: The Help Menu HLP
====================================
This is your standard Help Menu for any application. From here you can figure
out how to perform any function, as well as some basic guidelines.
=======================================
Section 2.9: The City Toolbar CTB
=======================================
The City Toolbar has all the tools you need to do work in the simulator. Some
of the functions can also be accessed from the menu bar or with hot keys.
Functions have been listed from left to right, top to bottom. In cases where a
button has several functions, I've indicated the default function of the
button.
2.9.1 Bulldozer:
==================
Clicking on this button activates the bulldozer; use it to maintain your city
by keeping it clean or by terra-forming the landscape.
Demolish/Clear: (default)
---------------
With this function you can tear down any manmade object (except for military
buildings), trees, manmade ponds/lakes, and rubble.
Cost: $1 per tile.
Level Terrain:
--------------
Use this to pick any tile at any elevation, then click and hold down to make
the surrounding tiles the same elevation by moving the pointer over them. This
tool can become very expensive, so be careful when using it. Also, if you level
over terrain that has building or trees on it, those things will be destroyed.
If you feel you must do extensive landscaping, you might consider doing it in
the terrain editor beforehand to save on money.
Cost: $25 per tile.
Raise Terrain:
--------------
This tool raises the elevation of the tile you selected by one elevation level
at a time (100 ft) to a maximum of 3050. This number may actually vary by
approximately 50 feet depending on your city, but that is the maximum that I've
seen. The surrounding tiles will also elevate accordingly to create a smooth
slope. Holding down on the mouse button lets you quickly create mountain
ranges. Like other landscaping tools, this is an expensive feature.
Cost: $25 per tile.
Lower Terrain:
--------------
This tool lowers the terrain one elevation level at a time, usually to a
minimum of 50 feet. If you go below sea level, the hole you've created will
fill with either fresh water or salt water, depending on the proximity of the
land to any oceans in your terrain. Similarly to the Raise Terrain tool, you
can use this to create holes (an actual geographic feature, see Jackson Hole,
WY) and valleys. Or, you can use it to create canals or waterways in your city
for shipping or scenery.
Cost: $25 per tile.
De-Zone:
--------
This feature is for removing zones from zoned land. It's useful if you discover
that you didn't really want to zone a particularly scenic area. It's also
useful for quick rubble cleanup. Simply zone one tile, and then de-zone the
rubble and that tile. The rubble disappears! Not only that, you've only paid $6
bucks for the single low-density tile and the cost to de-zone it! Compare this
to the $1 per tile you pay to clean rubble with a bulldozer. Also, you don't
have to go over each tile individually.
Cost: $1 per tile.
---Note about those environmental Sims---
If you start bulldozing the forests in your city, you'll eventually receive a
popup indicating that your Sims are not happy with your actions and would like
you to cease and desist.
2.9.2 Landscape Tool:
=======================
Here you can select tools to improve or beautify the natural landscape around
you.
Tree Tool: (default)
----------
This will place a tree on a single tile with one click. Repeated clicking on a
particular tile will result in more and more trees being placed, until there is
a patch of forest on that tile. Careful with the clicking, however. This tool
will allow you to blow all your money on a single tile, even though you only
end up planting 6 or 7 trees...way to go, slick.
Cost: $3 per click.
Water Tool:
-----------
Use this to cover a tile with water. You can cover any unoccupied, dry tile
with water, and clicking on sloped tiles will create waterfalls. It's also a
nice way to create scenic waterscapes within the city. If you use the water
tool to create channels of water intended for shipping, you will find that
ships will not sail on them, nor will seaports develop along their shores. This
is because the water you've placed essentially amounts to mere ponds, which
have no depth and cannot support shipping.
Cost: $100 per tile.
2.9.3 Emergency:
==================
This is for dispatching emergency units during a disaster. If there is no
disaster in progress, this button will be grayed-out and unavailable for use.
You have the option of dispatching firefighters, police, or the military, if
there is a military base in your city. If there is no fire department in your
city, a bucket brigade will rise to action. If there is no police station, the
National Guard will come to your rescue. If there is no military base, then
you're out of luck. The number of units you can dispatch is dependant on the
number of police and fire stations you have in your city, with an upper bound
set by the simulator. There is no cost to dispatch.
2.9.4 Power:
==============
Here is where you'll find all power-related tools.
Power Lines: (default)
------------
This is the tool you'll use to provide your Sims with electricity. It is a
rubber-banding tool, which means you click once and hold to start one end of
the line, and then release the button after position the other end of the line
where you'd like for it to be built. You'll see a dollar value where you
clicked, indicating the projected cost of the length of power line you wish to
place. If at some point you wish to cancel the action altogether, hold down
[Shift] before releasing the mouse button.
Power lines can cross over any length of flat terrain, and also over water (a
dialog box opens informing you of the cost of crossing that body of water). On
slopes, power lines can go straight up or down the slope but not along it. You
can also cross streets, railroads, and highways with power lines. You will need
to make sure that ALL your Sims are receiving power to have a successful city.
When power lines aren't connected to a power plant, flashing lightning bolts
will appear on each tile of power line, letting you know what's going on. Once
connected, these disappear at the end of the month.
Cost: $2 per tile over land, $10 per tile over water.
Power Plant:
------------
This is for building power plants. Click on it and a window with the available
power plants will open up, with information about each one. As time progresses,
more and more types of power plants will be available until they've all been
invented. With the exception of hydroelectric and wind power, all power plants
have a 50-year lifespan, and must be replaced. If you have disasters disabled,
the power plants will automatically be replaced, and the funds deducted from
your city's coffers. Otherwise, they will simply crumble and you must replace
them yourself (the newspapers will make you more than aware of an impending
collapse if you have the "Extra!" option checked). If your city does not have
enough power, parts of it will experience blackouts. If the situation is not
dealt with in a most timely manner, those areas will soon become so many blocks
of abandoned buildings. Your city NEEDS to be powered, ALL the time.
*These are approximate dates listed in the manual. All inventions will occur
within 10 years of these dates.
- COAL: The dirtiest and grimiest of them all. It's also fairly cheap, making
It a good choice for a new city. Later on, however, as your city grows in
size, coal will become insubstantial, and you'll want to move on to a more
efficient facility.
- HYDROELECTRIC: The big advantage here is that these things last forever, and
they generate no pollution. However, you'll have to build lots of them
before they become effective, and they can only be constructed on
waterfalls. They're also not so aesthetically pleasing.
- OIL: Although expensive for a starting power plant, these are fairly
reliable. Oil has a somewhat high unit cost, and it's somewhat of a
polluter. You're paying an extra $2,600 for an extra 20 MW over the coal
power plant, but you're also getting less than half the pollution a coal
plant generates.
- GAS: Fairly clean, gas is very expensive and produces relatively little
power. Not really recommended except for reserve or emergency power.
- NUCLEAR: This puppy produces quite a bit of power, and its unit costs are
identical to oil (with far less pollution, I might add). The big problem
with this one is its tendency to explode when overloaded. When these things
go, they go out with a bang, literally. If one were to explode, fires and
nuclear radiation would spread throughout your city. The radiation will
remain for essentially the rest of your city's lifetime, although it
supposedly wears off after several eons...
If you're timid you may choose to turn disasters off and you'll never have
to worry about irradiated cities.
- WIND: These things last forever, and they don't generate pollution. They
don't generate much power either, and it takes hundreds of them to supply
even a moderately sized city, resulting in the familiar wind farms of
Southern California and other Southwestern states (can't forget Minnesota).
The capacities of these little guys are dependent on weather and elevation.
- SOLAR: Not much here. Quite cheap and environmentally friendly, solar
receivers produce little power. Do not make your city completely reliant
upon these, because that's when the weather turns cloudy and leaves your
city in darkness. I recommend these for backup or emergency power.
- MICROWAVE: In SC2K, microwave power plants work by constructing a large
radar dish on the ground (what your power plant is). This dish collects a
pollution-free microwave beam from an orbiting satellite that has gathered
it from the sun's solar rays. At 1600 MW, these things are loaded for bear.
The only danger here is the slight chance that the beam received from the
orbiting satellite will miss and light a nearby structure on fire, resulting
in the casual death and destruction only a microwave power plant can
provide. A work-around for this is to build your plants in the middle of
nowhere, away from your city.
- FUSION: The granddaddy of 'em all, these things generate a whopping 2500 MW
apiece, with negligible pollution. In fact, you'll never need more than
four in all to power your city. Fusion power plants have the lowest unit
cost and there are also no inherent dangers associated with these. Just make
sure you have the funds to pay for these when the time comes to replace
them.
2.9.5 Water System:
=====================
This button provides access to all the functions related to water systems.
Pipes: (default)
------
This function automatically places you in the underground view of your city,
where you can see your layout of pipes, subways, and tunnels. Laying pipe works
just like laying power lines. You'll notice lots of little pipes under just
about every building, and connecting to these will make those buildings part of
the water system. When the pipes are successfully connected to your water
source, blue water will begin to flow through them. Water pipes can be laid
anywhere you wish, even under bodies of water and tall mountains. However,
pipes cannot be laid parallel with subways or tunnels on the same row of tiles.
Cost: $3 per tile.
Water Pump:
-----------
You'll have to construct several of these in order to supply your city with
enough water. The more water surrounding the pump, the higher the pump's
capacity. In general, it's good practice to keep all of your pumps together so
you know how many pumps you've got. There's no harm in scattering the pumps
every which way, but you might find it easier if they're all kept together. In
order to be functional, pumps require electricity and a connection to the
city's water system. If there is not enough water in your city, you will
receive several messages saying your city has a water shortage, but the city
won't disappear. Water pumps will only operate next to fresh water.
Here's a breakdown of how much water a pump will produce depending on the
surrounding landscape:
- One side next to water................36,000 gallons/month.
- Two sides next to water...............48,000 gallons/month.
- Three sides next to water.............54,000 gallons/month.
- Surrounded by water...................62,000 gallons/month.
Cost: $100 per pump.
Water Tower:
------------
These structures are used for storing water, and have a capacity of 40,000
gallons each. Any excess water not used by the city will be stored in a water
tower for the dry months. A water tower must be powered and connected to the
water system to be of any use.
Cost: $250 per tower.
Treatment Plant:
----------------
These buildings help to reduce the over all pollution in your city. They must
be powered and connected to the water system to be of any use.
They're also not available until around 1935.
Cost: $500 per treatment plant.
Desalinization Plant:
---------------------
These edifices are only useful if you must rely on salt water as your only
water source. These buildings have a maximum capacity of 105,000 gallons. They
will only work when powered and connected to the water system of your city.
These structures are not available until around 1990.
Despite what the smoke stack would have you believe, desalinization plants do
not pollute. Both water pumps and water treatment plants do, however.
Cost: $1,000 per desalinization plant.
---Note about water---
Exactly what effect does water have on your city? From my experience, cities
will experience retarded development when there is no water available. The
large 3x3 buildings will not be as likely to develop. However, it seems that a
city that had a bountiful water supply during its growth will not experience
any population loss if that water supply is removed.
It's my belief that having a water system adds to the overall realism of the
city.
2.9.6 Rewards:
================
Here you will find a selection of the available rewards for those most
outstanding mayoral skills of yours. Kudos! Rewards are based on population,
and you only get one of each at no cost to you, with the exception of
arcologies.
Here's a chart showing the rewards and their population requirements:
- Mayor's Mansion.........................2,000 people
- City Hall...............................10,000 people
- Statue..................................30,000 people
- Military Base...........................60,000 people
- Braun Llama Dome........................80,000 people
- Arcologies*.............................120,000 people
*Regardless of when your city reaches 120,000 people, arcologies will not
become available until they've been invented. And even when they are invented,
you must still have a population of 120,000 to purchase one. Arcologies will be
explained further below.
Mayor's House:
--------------
Your first reward. Querying this building will either result in cheers or boos
depending on your approval rating, which can be seen in the query window.
Also, you'll see a "built-in" date, the number of employees, and the number of
doorstops. The number of employees is a randomly determined number, which
decreases by 1 per year until it reaches zero. The number of doorstops starts
at zero and increases by 1 per year until the number of employees reaches zero.
This building must be powered and watered.
City Hall:
----------
After reaching 10,000 people you are rewarded with the City Hall. This
building, when queried, provides useful statistics on land usage. One
particular percentage you should note is transportation. This number should
generally be below 25 percent. It seems most people tend to have percentages in
the 30's, however. This building requires water and electricity.
The Statue:
-----------
Does little or nothing for your city, as far as I can tell. You may place yours
upon a large mountain for all to see, sending your Sims into their homes
huddled in fear of the almighty mayor...or you can place it in a park or
something...I don't know. Query it and you'll find out how tall it is (always
65 ft), what it's made of (bronze), and how many pigeons sit upon your
shoulders...yay...I guess. It doesn't need to be powered, but it does require
water.
Military Base:
--------------
Unlike the other rewards, you only get one chance for this, and it's never a
sure thing. You may want to save just before you expect to hit 60,000 to get
the desired results. When you reach that population, a dialog box will pop up
requesting your permission to seek out land for a base. If granted, you may or
may not get one, depending on the landscape. If you don't, then that's that.
If you do get a base, there are four types:
- Air Force: In my experience, this is the most common military base. It's an
8x8 patch of zoned land that contains runways, control towers, etc. and
provides military support as well as pollution and crime.
- Army: This one is more likely on hilly terrain, and varies from the Air
Force base in that it has roads criss-crossing its 8x8 footprint along with
hangars and parking lots.
- Navy: This one requires coastline, and it has a different procedure when
forming the base. A strip of land that is 10 tiles long is chosen along a
coast. For each tile, an additional 3 tiles inland is also selected for the
base, resulting in a net coverage of 40 tiles (instead of the usual 64 that
comprise army and air force bases). Confused? Below is a poorly-rendered
ASCII representation.
W W W W W W W W W W W W
W W W W W W % % W W W W
L % W W % % % % % % % L
L % % % % % % % % % % L
L % % % % % % % % % % L
L % % % % % L L % % % L
L L % % L L L L L L L L
L L L L L L L L L L L L
W = Water L = Land % = Base
- Missile Silo: Quite useless, really, and if you get this one, I suggest
reloading your city for a different result. Although only 4x4, your city
will usually be peppered with several of them. They provide no military
protection, but they do pollute and increase criminal activity. They are
rare, so you may feel endeared towards them because they do look kind of
cool.
---Note about Air Force bases---
There seems to be a glitch in which the resultant Air Force base does not
develop properly. A single runway will develop and that will be all. To prevent
this, make sure to save before you are rewarded with the base, so that you can
always re-load the game if the glitch occurs.
If at some point you decide you no longer like the base in your city, you can
remove it by lowering the terrain next to it. Doing this will promptly destroy
the base.
Braun Llama Dome:
-----------------
Named in honor of Jeff Braun, then CEO of Maxis. The Llama reference is to be
expected, considering Maxis' obsession with that creature, thanks to Will
Wright. It looks really cool (sort of a combination between the Seattle Space
Needle, the Eiffel Tower, and two Gateway Arches), and that's about it.
Querying the Llama Dome will tell you the numbers of the following (all
completely random):
- Weddings
- Visitors
- Llama Sightings
- Complaints
- Bungee Jumps
And that's about it...use those numbers wisely, my friend. For within them lies
both eternal hope and eternal damnation...
Arcologies:
-----------
These are the most useful of your rewards, and they aid greatly towards
increasing your city's population.
There are four kinds of arcologies:
- Plymouth Arco: Available in 2000, it has a capacity of 55,000 (though all
arcologies can become overcrowded). These are industrially partial, and
thus produce a lot of pollution and crime.
Cost: $100,000.
- Forest Arco: Available in 2050, these are the complete opposite of the
Plymouth arcos. They look cool, and they are less prone to pollution and
crime, seeing as how they only hold 30,000 or so people. They are more
expensive, however.
Cost: $120,000.
- Darco: Available in 2100, this is essentially the "badass" of arcologies.
Rumored to produce mutants and have meandering, twisting hallways, each one
also sports a small fleet of jet aircraft. They have a capacity of 45,000.
Cost: $150,000.
- Launch Arco: The biggest and best of them all, these are the shining glory
of any large city. Capable of supporting 60,000 people, these things can
make crime and pollution skyrocket. In fact, if you recklessly plop these
all over the place, you'll cause a chemical spill. Make sure to surround
these things with lots of police stations and parks to help curb their
negative side-effects.
One of the big features of Launch Arcos is their ability to "launch." In
the DOS version 1.0, there is no such ability. The arcos will launch in the
Macintosh version 1.1, Windows version 1.0, and DOS version 1.1. When you
reach the critical threshold of 349 launch arcos, a popup will appear
stating, "The Exodus has begun." What follows is the immediate destruction
of each arcology, one by one. This is a rather time consuming process, and
you might want to make a trip to the bathroom during its progress. When
complete, another popup appears:
"Your launch arcos have departed into space to found new worlds. You
have been compensated for their construction."
Indeed you are compensated handsomely; so don't too feel bad when your city
is completely and utterly ruined...
Cost: $200,000
---The Arcology Limit---
In the original version of SC2K on both the Mac and DOS, there was a 140-arco-
per-city limit. This limit was removed in later versions. The original reason
for the limit was because of the overall 150 microsim limit. Microsims are used
for gathering local information within a city for a specific building. For
example, police stations, hospitals, schools, etc. each requires one microsim.
When more than 150 such buildings are constructed, the information queried from
those buildings last constructed will contain the basic land value, etc.
Because of this, Maxis decided to cap the arco limit at 140, reserving the
other 10 microsims for more important functions. In later versions, newly
constructed arcos were also given the basic query information.
It seems that if you build enough arcos, even City Hall will lose its microsim,
with its precious land-use data. Beware.
2.9.7 Roads:
==============
There are a variety of different tools available with this button. First I'll
chart them out, and then explain each in detail afterwards.
Below is a chart outlining the various road costs:
+----------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Type | Invention | Construction | Maintenance Cost |
| | year | Cost ($) | per year ($) |
|-------------|-----------|---------------|----------------------------|
| Road | 1900 | 10 per tile | 0.10 per tile |
|-------------|-----------|---------------|----------------------------|
| Causeway | 1900 | 25 per tile | 0.25 per tile |
| Bridge | | | 0.10 for each end ramp |
|-------------|-----------|---------------|----------------------------|
| Raising | 1900 | 50 per tile | 0.25 per tile |
| Bridge | | | 0.10 for each end ramp |
|-------------|-----------|---------------|----------------------------|
| Suspension | 1900 | 75 per tile | 0.25 per tile |
| Bridge | | | 0.10 for each end ramp |
|-------------|-----------|---------------|----------------------------|
| Highway | 1930 | 100 per | 0.80 per section |
| | | Section | |
|-------------|-----------|---------------|----------------------------|
| Highway | 1930 | 25 per ramp | 0.10 per ramp |
| Ramp | | | |
|-------------|-----------|---------------|----------------------------|
| Highway | 1930 | 200 per | 0.80 per section |
| Bridge | | Section | |
|-------------|-----------|---------------|----------------------------|
| Girder | 1930 | 300 per | 1.80 per section |
| Bridge | | Section | 0.80 for each ramp end |
|-------------|-----------|---------------|----------------------------|
| Tunnel | 1900 | 150 per tile | 0.20 per tile |
|-------------|-----------|---------------|----------------------------|
| Bus | 1920 | 250 per Bus | 2 per Bus Depot per month |
| Depot | | Depot | ($24 per year) |
+----------------------------------------------------------------------+
Road: (default)
-----
Roads are perhaps the most important form of transportation in SC2K. While it
is possible to build a city without using roads at all, it's both expensive to
build and expensive to maintain. To construct a road, simply click and drag
from starting point to ending point. When the highlighted area represents what
you want built, release the mouse button and you're all set. Like other rubber-
banding tools, you'll see a dollar amount showing you how much the proposed
road will cost. When you build a road up to a shoreline, you'll be prompted on
whether or not you want to build a bridge.
If you can build one, you may choose from a selection of available proposed
bridge types, discussed in detail below:
- Causeway Bridge: This is the cheapest type of bridge to build. It can cover
any distance, no matter how long or short, but it will not allow ships to
pass underneath. These bridges are okay for going across lakes or large
ponds, but don't build them between your seaports and the edge of the map
where the river or ocean is (as if the latter was possible anyway).
- Raising Bridge: This is a good bridge for covering shorter distances between
5-12 tiles. Its big selling point is that it allows ships to pass
underneath. You will actually see the middle portion rise as the ship sails
under. Remember though, it's limited to distances of 5-12 tiles.
- Suspension Bridge: This is the most expensive bridge available for roads,
and it may only bridge distances that are longer than 7 tiles. It has no
maximum length, however, and it offers the only solution for crossing long
spans that must allow shipping.
As you can see, there are several options for building bridges available.
Bridges cannot intersect each other nor can the two ends of the bridge be
different elevation levels. Bridges also can't be built diagonally.
When two roads intersect, a traffic light is built, and when a T-intersection
is made, the butting road has a stop sign. If you build a road to the edge of
your map, you'll be asked whether or not you'd like to build a connection to
your neighboring city for $1,000. These are important for allowing your
industry to grow, although not as important as highway connections or railroad
connections.
---PlayStation Note---
In the PlayStation version, the bridge you built was randomly determined, so
long as there was more than one bridge option available. I recall fondly asking
to build a bridge over and over until I got the desired result.
Highway:
--------
Although similar to roads in construction, highways build in 2x2 sections
instead of single tiles. This is because of their increased traffic load and
also because of certain simulator restrictions. Highways can cover any length,
and actually require roads to be of any use, since they are the only way Sims
in your city can get on the highways. When building on slopes, highways can
only handle one elevation increase for every two tiles. If the slope is steeper
than this, the highway won't build. When two highways intersect, a cloverleaf
type intersection is formed. The same holds true for a T-intersection. When
building a bridge, the technique differs from that of building road bridges.
Instead of rubber-banding right off to the shore, you must click once on the
shore with the highway tool.
This will bring up a dialog box asking if you'd like to build a bridge, of
which there are two types:
- HIGHWAY BRIDGE: This is the standard highway bridge. It doesn't require any
ramparts*, but it does not allow any ships to pass through. It can cross any
length.
- REINFORCED GIRDER BRIDGE: This bridge is more expensive and it requires
ramparts. However, it can also withstand earthquakes more easily and it
allows ships to pass under.
* Ramparts are basically ramps that allow the land road to reach the proper
height so that it will align correctly with the bridge road. This is done in
cases where the height of the bridge must be sufficient so that boats may pass
under, but the shores of the nearby land are near sea level.
Highway bridges may not cross each other nor may they be built diagonally or
with each end at varying elevations. When building highways to neighboring
cities, the cost is $1,500 per connection.
---PlayStation Note---
Once again, this is different for the PlayStation version. In this case, you
would not be able to get the reinforced bridge unless the 2x2 highlight was
half water-half land, and even then it was a hard sell. It is possible, though.
Onramp:
-------
This tool is used for connecting highways to roads. Any road that is running
perpendicular to a highway may be connected to it. Also, any road whose end is
adjacent to any part of the highway can be connected as well. You will have to
build four ramps for each road-highway intersection in order to allow for full
inter-modal travel between the two. In fact, Onramps are necessary if you do
build highways, because without them there is no way Sims in your city can use
the highway.
Tunnel:
-------
Use this tool to tunnel roads through large mountains. It has no real merit
unless the mountain it tunnels through is jagged and complex, making road
travel impossible. If you make a tunnel too long, the Sims won't use it because
Sims can only travel so far between zones in order to complete a successful
trip. If the tunnel is longer than this distance, the Sims can't use the tunnel
without failing every attempted trip. Tunnels are also expensive, and you
should only use them when you have to. Tunnels cannot be built diagonally, nor
can their two ends be at different elevations. Tunnels also can't intersect
each other, even at different altitudes.
Bus Depot:
----------
Bus Depots differ from most of the other tools in this section because they are
actual buildings as opposed to viaducts. Each one is 2x2, and you construct
them next to any road. You must supply water and electricity to the depots. Bus
depots help reduce traffic, which in turn helps reduce pollution (come to think
of it, this is the only Roads tool that actually reduces pollution, rather than
increase it). Of all the public transportation options around, buses help the
most towards decreasing traffic. Bus depots have a radius of effect, which
decreases as distance from the depot increases. Sims must go to the depot to
get on a bus, but they can get off of the bus anywhere. It is suggested that
you try placing bus depots at intersections with very heavy traffic, and the
effect is certainly noticeable.
2.9.8 Rails:
==============
Under here you'll find all of the tools required for constructing a fully
functional rail system.
Table of rail system costs:
+--------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Type | Invention | Construction | Maintenance Cost |
| | year | Cost ($) | per year ($) |
|-------------|-----------|---------------|--------------------------|
| Rail | 1900 | 25 per tile | 0.40 per tile |
|-------------|-----------|---------------|--------------------------|
| Rail | 1900 | 75 per tile | 0.25 per tile |
| Bridge | | | |
|-------------|-----------|---------------|--------------------------|
| Rail | 1900 | 500 per | 1.50 per depot |
| Depot | | Depot | |
|-------------|-----------|---------------|--------------------------|
| Subway | 1910 | 100 per tile | 0.40 per tile |
| Line | | | |
|-------------|-----------|---------------|--------------------------|
| Subway | 1910 | 250 per | 0.80 per station |
| Station | | Station | |
|-------------|-----------|---------------|--------------------------|
| Rail/subway | 1910 | 250 per | 0.80 per junction |
| Junction | | junction | |
+--------------------------------------------------------------------+
Rail: (default)
-----
Available from the get-go, rails are the basic mode of rail transport. You
build them just like you would roads. The only difference between road and
rails (besides the fact that rails require depots to operate properly), is that
rails cannot handle as steep a slope as roads can. Rails can only move up one
elevation level for every two tiles. Rails can cross water, and there is only
one type of bridge available. The same restrictions apply to rail bridges that
apply to road bridges. When connecting to a neighbor, the cost is $1,500.
Rail Depot:
-----------
These are 2x2 buildings that you build next to your rails in order to complete
your rail system. Sims can only get on or off of a train at depots, so be sure
to place at least one in each zone. Sims will build house next to a rail depot
only if it will take them to rail depots in other zones. Having a complete rail
system in your city will serve to reduce traffic on the roads, which -when in
excess- can lead to pollution. Depots must be built on level ground and
supplied with electricity. When you build one, a small train appears out front
and begins to make the rounds. The maximum number of trains you will see is 5.
Make sure to place your rail depots next to the rail, or else they won't
function properly.
Subway Line:
------------
After its invention in 1910, subways should become a major factor in your
city's transit system if the city becomes very large. It will be difficult to
construct a very useful subway system in a small city because of the huge
expenses associated with subways. When you select this tool, you'll
automatically be taken to the underground view where you can view your city's
subways, water manes, road tunnels, and Rail<-->Subway junctions (to be
discussed further below). When laying out subway, try your best to keep the
lengths as short as you can manage. At $100 per tile, subways can become
horrifically expensive if you don't build carefully. You cannot build subways
along a line of tiles that is already occupied by a water mane, although
subways can pass under them. One of the great advantages of subways is that the
system as a whole takes up very little real estate. When you compare a subway
system to a similar highway/road system, the difference in land usage is
astounding. This makes subways a good choice for developed areas you don't want
to demolish large chunks of in order to make room for roads. Remember that a
subway system is incomplete until the stations have been placed. Also, subways
cannot be connected to neighboring cities.
Subway Station:
---------------
You'll need these in order to complete a subway system. They're only 1x1 so
they have rather small footprints. They must be place on or next to a subway
line in order to function. They must also be connected to a power source. If
you build a subway station in a particular zone, a patch surrounding the
station will develop so long as the subway line to which that station is
connected also has stations in the other types of zones. It's actually possible
to build a city with nothing but subways, albeit extremely expensive. It's
certainly something to look at though.
Subway to Rail junction:
------------------------
With these, you can link your rail and subway systems to provide a more
complete form of mass transit. You can only build them next to a rail line or a
subway line. You can't just build them out in the middle of nowhere. You will
actually see the train enter the tunnel...and perhaps never return...
2.9.9 Ports:
==============
With this button you can choose from one of two ports. Both are needed in order
to support a large city.
Seaport: (default)
--------
The main purpose of seaports is to increase the demand for industry.
Rather, you will have to construct one sooner or later as your city reaches a
certain size (around 10,000 Sims). They must be constructed on a coast with
navigable waters, and they must be hooked up to your city's electrical system.
The minimum size for a seaport is 1x3 tiles. If the seaport is smaller than 1x3
tiles, it will not develop properly. When zoning the seaport, make sure there
is plenty of waterfront space (the most valuable portion of a seaport anyway),
and also make sure there is plenty of space inland for warehouses and the like.
If you notice that demand for your industry has diminished, check your seaport
to see if it is fully developed. If it's not, you may need to zone more space.
Cost: $150 per tile.
Airport:
--------
Airports, more than anything, serve to increase the demand for commerce. There
are a lot more restrictions in regards to airports when it comes to how you
zone them. First of all, the size restriction is a minimum of 2x6 tiles. Not
12, but 2x6. In other words, if you were looking at a rectangle, one side must
be at least 2 tiles long, and the adjacent sides must be 6 tiles long. If your
airport isn't at least 2x6, there will be little development because runways
need a certain amount of space before they can be built. In fact, if you
demolish one runway tile, every single runway tile it was connected to will
also be destroyed.
Secondly, airports must be powered and watered, both are very important.
Finally, it's unwise to zone dense commercial buildings in close propinquity to
the airports, since airplanes can actually crash into those buildings. While
usually minor, air crashes have the potential of developing into serious
problems like massive fires and the like...all because you just *had* to zone
for those skyscrapers...for shame!
After an airport successfully develops, you'll see planes take off and head to
other cities whilst other planes come in for a landing. Additionally, a
helicopter will appear and let you know if there's heavy automobile traffic.
Cost: $250 per tile.
---Note---
Next I'll explain the various types of zones, but here are some general rules
to keep in mind:
- All 3 zones must be supplied with power.
- All 3 zones must be within 3 tiles of transportation that is also connected
to the other 2 zone types. Now, this is a little fuzzy. Technically, if a
2x2 or 3x3 building develops, only one corner of it actually has to be
within 3 tiles of viable transportation. It's fairly logical, I know. But
visually, it can be confusing if you don't understand what's actually
occurring.
- The basic difference between light and dense zones is that light zones only
support 1x1 buildings while dense zones support all building sizes.
However, light zones will generally result in higher land values and lower
population density (high population density in and of itself can lead to
things like pollution, traffic, crime, and all that bad stuff).
- Make sure that your city has all three zone types. Think about it, a city
can't exist if all it's nothing but residents without jobs, or commerce
without shoppers, or industry without workers. You can probably cite real
life examples of "bedroom cities" that support larger cities in close
propinquity. In SC2K, this type of intercity complexity doesn't exist. If
you make your city nothing but residential zones, another city will not take
up your slack. However, you can split your city into separate sectors, each
a different zone that has the appearance of being separate cities. These
different sectors would still all be seen as one city by the simulator.
- Zones will develop successfully when trips from that zone can be made within
a certain number of steps. This refers to the distance a Sim will travel to
other zones before giving up. If you build a section of residential,
commercial, and industrial zones at the opposite ends of the map from each
other, they will not develop even if connected by highway because they're
too far apart from one another. This is why it's a good idea to keep an even
sprinkling of zones throughout the city, instead of, say, three blocks of
zones for each zone type.
Residential zones are where your Sims live. Without residential zones, your
city will have nobody to support industry and commerce. There are two types of
residential zones, light and dense. Residential zones must be powered, and
should be watered. Like all zones, residential zones must be within three tiles
of a road, train station, or subway station in order to be developed.
Light Residential:
------------------
This is a low-density form of residential zones that only supports single-acre
homes. Depending on the land value, you'll either see acres of lower-class
homes, or acres of mansions. This low-density zone only supports 10 Sims per
acre.
Cost: $5 per tile.
Dense Residential: (default)
------------------
This particular type of residential zone allows for high-density buildings.
Large plots of this zone will be filled with a hodgepodge of various
skyscrapers and the like. Because of the high density, be wary of crime and
land value effects. Each acre can support approximately 40 Sims.
Cost: $10 per tile.
---Churches---
One of the things you'll notice is that as your residential zones develop, 2x2
churches will be periodically constructed in your zoned land. However, churches
aren't considered residential buildings. If they bother you and you start
trying to demolish them, you'll notice that new churches pop up elsewhere.
Bottom line: Churches are here to stay, live with it. In the DOS version,
typing in a few uncouth words may reward you with even more churches. Head to
Section 7 for more info on that (T T C).
Commercial zones are where your Sims go shopping and do other Acts and Things
of commerce. If there are no commercial zones, there will be no place for your
Sims to buy stuff with the money they make, and your city will falter.
Light Commercial:
-----------------
With this zone type, only 1x1 building will be constructed.
A variety of gas stations, mini-marts, and 0toy stores will sprout. This zone
supports about 10 Sims per acre.
Cost: $5 per tile.
Dense Commercial: (default)
-----------------
This zone will reward you with huge skyscrapers, mini-malls, theaters, and
other large edifices. Make sure you have a large demand for commerce, though.
Otherwise, these large buildings won't develop.
Industry is absolutely vital to any city in SC2K. Without a strong industrial
sector, your city will have a hard time getting by. Consequently, industry is
probably the easiest zone to develop, at least in my experience.
Light Industrial:
-----------------
This zone will result in acres of squat 1x1 buildings, which resemble some sort
of industrial-looking thing. In any case, it's low density.
However, the very nature of industry pretty much eliminates the advantages
typically associated with low-density zones. In other words, you'll still get
low land values and lots of pollution.
Cost: $5 per tile.
Dense Industrial: (default)
-----------------
This type of industry will ultimately result in large 3x3 factories which belch
out the pollution like it's going out of style. Most of the buildings resemble
vague, industrial-looking buildings (heck, one of them is even called
"industrial thingamajig"). Be careful with this zone. If you have no pollution
controls and leave these things to go unchecked, there's a large chance that a
chemical spill will result.
Cost: $10 per tile.
2.9.13 Education:
===================
Without education, your Sims will be unable to get high-paying jobs in
technical fields. As a result, your industrial sector will remain mired in the
lower-tier, high-polluting industry-types. In SC2K, the overall education level
of your Sims is measured as an "education quotient" or EQ. The higher the EQ of
your city, the smarter your Sims are. EQ takes a very long time to develop, as
in a generation or two. This is because EQ is a lifelong process, as children
go to school, then college, then libraries and museums. The quality of your
education buildings is rated, appropriately, by a letter grade. A+ is the best,
F is the worst.
School: (default)
-------
These buildings serve to increase the education of Sims between the ages of 5
and 15. They will increase EQ to a maximum of 90. You will need to build a
school for approximately every 15,000 Sims (each school can hold 1,500
students, and requires 60 teachers). These 3x3 buildings have an annual
maintenance fee of $25 each.
Cost: $250 per school.
College:
--------
These are for Sims between the ages of 15-25. They'll boost EQ to a maximum of
140. For every 50,000 Sims your city has, you'll need to build one college, as
each can hold 5,000 students and 210 teachers. These 4x4 buildings have an
annual maintenance fee of $100 per college.
Cost: $1,000 per college.
Library:
--------
These rotund buildings don't actually increase EQ, but merely serve to keep it
from decreasing over time. This keeps your work force smart and bright, which
is good for the technical industries. These 2x2 buildings should be built once
for every 20,000 Sims or so.
Make sure to click on the "Ruminate" button to check out some Neil Gaiman
writings. Interesting...
Cost: $500 per library.
Museum:
-------
These serve the same purpose as libraries, although they're twice as effective.
You should build a 3x3 museum for every 40,000 Sims.
Cost: $1,000 per museum.
2.9.14 City Services:
=======================
Here you'll be able to construct all of those buildings every city needs to
keep its Sims happy, safe, and healthy. Because they're so necessary for the
well-being of your city, it's unwise to skimp on them.
Police Station: (default)
---------------
These are what you'll build to keep the streets of your city safe. Without
them, crime would run rampant and your Sims would be unhappy, then they would
leave (and we can never have that). Police stations are very recognizable,
seeing as how they're blue, with large badges on each side of the building.
These buildings have a radius of effect, which slowly decreases until it tapers
off completely. It's not a good idea to place your police stations (or any
public service building for that matter) near the edge of your city's map. If
you do this, half of the area your police station patrols will be off the edge
or your map. This means that your police station is essentially running at
half-capacity, but you're still paying the full costs. It's also a good idea to
pattern out the layout of your police stations so that you get an even area of
coverage. Since crime is a negative effect on land values, police stations
serve to increase land values, and you'll find that Sims will readily build
next to these 3x3 structures. Police stations cost $100 per year to maintain.
Cost: $500 per police station.
Fire Station:
-------------
Fire Stations are essential for keeping your Sims safe in the event of a fire.
Obviously, if you have disasters disabled, fire stations are essentially
useless, but your Sims will still complain if they're not there. Just like
police stations, fire stations have a radius of effect, which diminishes until
it tapers off completely. They are also 3x3 tiles. You can view the total fire
coverage of your various stations in the City Map Window, which is explained
further below (Insert link here). Fire stations each have a yearly maintenance
fee of $100.
Cost: $500 per fire station.
Hospital:
---------
These 3x3 edifices serve to increase the overall life expectancy of your Sims.
Unlike police and fire stations, the effectiveness of hospitals concerns the
number of Sims that can be treated, rather than the area in which it is placed.
This means you can place all of your hospitals at one end of the city, and
they'll work just fine. You'll want to construct a hospital for every 25,000
Sims. If your hospitals become overcrowded, they will not perform as well and
the life expectancy of your Sims will deteriorate consequentially.
Hospitals each have a yearly maintenance fee of $50.
Cost: $500 per hospital.
Prison:
-------
Rather stately, these 4x4 buildings are used to house the criminals your police
stations capture. They operate similar to hospitals, in that they have a
maximum capacity, rather than an area of effect. As such, each prison can hold
up to 10,000 inmates. They can hold more, but at that point, the inmates will
begin escaping.
The inmates are not held forever. Each year, %25 of the prison population is
paroled to make room for new prisoners. So, if your prison currently has 5,000
inmates, 1,250 will be released. If your police stations arrest more than 1,250
per year, your prison will slowly fill up, and once it does, crime will
increase.
As can be expected, prisons have a rather negative effect on local land values,
and your Sims will not appreciate it if you construct one across the street
from their homes. Because of this, it's generally a good idea to keep prisons
isolated from your city, if possible. There are many creative ways to do this,
such as an Alcatraz-style prison island, or perhaps just stick it in the middle
of an empty plot of land, and surround it with a moat of water. Be creative.
Prisons have no maintenance fee. But be wary, for they're extremely expensive
to build.
---About Prisons---
I've almost NEVER gotten a prison to fill up completely, regardless of my
city's population. It can happen, however, so don't disregard it completely.
Cost: $3,000.
2.9.15 Recreation:
====================
This is where you'll go to provide your Sims with happiness. Recreation is a
great way to boost land values, approval ratings, and it's also a great way to
lower pollution and crime. Be sure to always keep recreation in the back of
your mind as you create your city. I'm sure some of you know what it's like to
live in a dull, boring city with nothing to do, so imagine putting your Sims
through that.
Small Parks: (default)
------------
These parks help to increase residential growth, and of course they have a
positive impact on land values. They don't require power (nor do they conduct
it), but they do need water. Their small size and low cost make them idea for
random smatterings of small parks throughout your city. Something you can do
with these after your city is fully developed is to simply go around and plop
parks down wherever you see empty land.
Cost: $20 per small park.
Large Parks:
------------
These kinds of parks have a much more substantial effect on land values and
residential growth. At 3x3, they have a much larger footprint than small parks.
These parks also don't require power, but they must be watered.
Cost: $150 per large park.
Zoo:
----
Zoos, along with all of the benefits that parks provide, also boost your
tourism industry. These 4x4 buildings also have a little neat sound effect,
which to me sounds like a lion's roar. The information you'll find in the zoo's
query window is meaningless. Each zoo has a annual maintenance fee of $50, and
make sure each one is supplied with power and water.
Cost: $3,000 per zoo.
Stadium:
--------
Stadiums have pretty much the same effect as zoos, but also serve to increase
your popularity as a mayor. Whenever you construct a stadium, you'll be asked
to choose a team and name it. Note the default names that come with each type
of team. Stadiums are 4x4 and fairly recognizable, and also require power and
water.
---PlayStation Note---
You cannot choose the sport that a particular stadium features in the
PlayStation version.
Cost: $5,000.
Marina:
-------
Like all recreational buildings, these 3x3 marinas serve to boost residential
growth, along with the tourism industry. Because of the nature of marinas, it's
essential that each one have at least one tile over water. Once powered, a
small sailboat appears and begins to sail about. Technically, you could place a
marina right over a single tile of water, and it would function. However, it
would be aesthetically displeasing, since there'd be no sailboat. What's a
marina without a sailboat? If you're lucky, you may just catch Nessie the Loch
Ness monster swimming to and fro amidst your marina (for more info on this, go
to Section 8).
Cost: $1,000 per marina.
2.9.16 Signs:
===============
This button is for placing signs in your city. They are not really part of the
city, as they have no effect on the city itself, and they have no costs. To
place a sign, click on the sign button, then click on the tile over which you'd
like your sign to be built (there are some instances in which you can't select
a particular tile for which to build a sign on). A window pops up and then you
can type in the text that you want the sign to display. When you're done, click
the done button and voila, you have a sign. You can also delete and edit signs
by clicking on the sign button, and then clicking on the tile under the sign
you built. In the window that pops up, you can edit the sign text or delete it
altogether. If you want to put in special characters like letters with accents
or upside-down question marks or exclamations, you can use alt combinations
like Alt+0191 for an upside-down question mark.
---PlayStation Note---
You cannot place signs in the PlayStation version.
2.9.17 Query:
===============
This button is perhaps the most useful and essential tool in SC2K, and you'll
be sure to make heavy use of it. To use it, you can do one of two things:
- Click on the query button, then the building or tile you want to query.
- Hold down [Shift] then click on the building or tile you want to query.
The advantage of the 2nd method is that whatever tool you were using before you
queried will still be active once you're done. Depending on the building you
queried, you can actually rename that building. If you can't rename the
building, just click anywhere inside the query window, or press [Esc] to exit
that window. If you can rename the building, you will have to decide whether
you want to rename it or not, in which case you'll choose between "Rename" and
"DONE." There is no cost for querying.
---PlayStation Note---
You cannot rename buildings in the PlayStation version.
2.9.18 Rotate Clockwise and Rotate Counter-Clockwise:
=======================================================
These two buttons are used to rotate the view of the city clockwise or counter-
clockwise, for which there is no cost. You'll find that this feature is most
useful when various buildings or landforms impede your view. A quicker method
of rotating the view is to press [Delete] to rotate counter-clockwise or [Page
Down] to rotate clockwise on a PC keyboard.
2.9.19 Zoom In and Zoom Out:
==============================
This pair of buttons does exactly what the name implies. You'll notice that
when you zoom out that the trains disappear, and the buildings seem a little
different. This is because each zoom (save for the two closest in the Windows
version) uses a different set of drawings for each zoom. You can imagine the
time it took to draw each building in three different zoom levels. There is no
cost to zoom in or out. A quicker method would be to press [Home] to zoom in or
[End] to zoom out.
---PlayStation note---
There are only two zoom levels in the PlayStation version.
2.9.20 Center:
================
This tool is for centering the city map on the spot that you click on. To use
it, simply click on the center button, and then click on the spot that you want
to appear in the center of your viewing window. There are a couple of quicker
ways to do this:
- Right-click on the spot you want centered, and select "Center."
- When you use this tool, hold the mouse button down to scroll around your
city.
With the center tool, you can also destroy the helicopter by clicking on the
helicopter with the center tool repeatedly. The helicopter will swiftly fall to
the ground and explode. Maxis added this feature to make up for all of the
annoyance the helicopter caused in SimCity Classic.
---PlayStation Note---
The omnipresent mouse pointer serves as a centering device.
The following 6 buttons open up windows which will be explained in full detail
in section 4 (W N S). The windows they open are only listed here.
- Maps Window
- Graphs Window
- Population Window
- City Industry Window
- Neighbors Window
- Budget Window
2.9.21 Show Buildings:
========================
Clicking this button will toggle the display of all the buildings in your city.
2.9.22 Show Signs:
====================
This button toggles the display of all the signs in your city. This includes
signs you made and signs generated by neighbor connections.
2.9.23 Show Infrastructure:
=============================
This button toggles the display of your city's infrastructure. This includes
all transportation systems, power lines, and trees.
2.9.24 Show Zones:
====================
This button toggles the display of all zoned buildings. This does not include
structures that you built, nor does it include churches.
2.9.25 Show Underground:
==========================
This button toggles the display of your city's underground, in which you can
view your subway and water systems. A necessity if you actually want to
construct said systems.
2.9.26 Help:
==============
This button displays the help contents for SC2K. Everything you need to know in
order to technically know how to play SC2K is available here.
While this is not a button, it is useful nonetheless. Here is where you can see
the magnitude of demand for specific zones in your city. If the bar for a
particular zone is pointing upward towards the + sign, then demand is positive
and that zone will develop. If the bar is pointing downward toward the - sign
then that zone has no demand. Buildings will become abandoned and zones will
not develop.
---DOS Note---
Clicking on the Demand Indicator actually does something in the DOS version!
Click on it and you'll receive a popup with a brief explanation of what the
Demand Indicator does.
==========================================
Section 2.10: The Terrain Editor TRE
==========================================
Since we're on the subject of terrain editing, here are some basic facts about
SC2K terrains:
- Terrains are square pieces of land with 128 tiles to a side. Each tile
approximates to a single acre, 200x200 feet. The total terrain area is about
25 square miles. You may think that's a lot, but most real cities are, in
fact, much larger than that.
- There are 2 types of water in SC2K: fresh water and salt water. Fresh water
will usually be found in any ponds or rivers on your terrain, while salt
water will be found along the coast. Of course, you can end up editing the
terrain to such a point that the above would no longer apply, but that is
how most terrains will start out.
The Terrain Toolbar is only available when you're editing a new map. All of the
functions in this toolbar are free of charge. As with the City Toolbar, I'll
describe the functions left to right, top to bottom.
2.10.1 Coast:
===============
This button lets you choose whether or not you'd like to have a coast in your
city. Coasts are useful for high land values and seaports.
2.10.2 River:
==============
This button lets you choose whether or not you'd like to have a river in your
city. Rivers provides lots of coastline, and they also make it easy to
construct seaports. Most of the time, rivers will zigzag through your city, but
sometimes they can be rather straight.
2.9.3 Mountain, Water, and Tree Sliders:
===========================================
These sliders allow you to adjust how mountainous, watery, or forested you want
your city to be.
Mountains:
----------
When this slider is maxed out, your city will literally be uninhabitable
because of the lack of flat terrain available. If this slider is zeroed out,
then your city will have but a few hills and pits.
Water:
------
When this slider is maxed out, your city will be covered in water if it's
relatively flat. If it's zeroed out, you will have no water at all unless you
opted for a river or coast in your city.
Trees:
------
When this slider is maxed out, you city will be covered with trees. It's nice
for creating that forest ambiance that some mayors like. If this slider is
zeroed out, there will be no trees in your city.
2.10.4 Make:
==============
This button generates a new terrain for you based on your selected criteria.
You can generate a terrain as many times as you want. If the current terrain
doesn't suit your needs, try again. Listen to the voice as the terrain is
generated. "Reticulating Splines."
2.10.5 Raise Terrain:
=======================
This button behaves exactly like the one in the City Toolbar.
2.10.6 Lower Terrain:
=======================
This button behaves exactly like the one in the City Toolbar.
---Note---
The previous buttons are glitched in the PC and DOS versions, it seems. The
terrain does not raise or lower correctly. If you really need detailed terrain
editing, I'd suggest doing what you can in the terrain editor, then doing the
rest in a city with a money cheat. After that, go to the file menu and select
"Edit New Map," to, once again, see your now completed terrain in the terrain
editor (we do this to dispel any possible bad karma from using a money cheat).
Select "Done" on the Terrain Toolbar to finally create your city.
2.10.7 Stretch Terrain:
=========================
This button allows you to pick any tile on the map, then raise or lower it as
you see fit. It's the quickest way to make mountains. However, it seems to
glitch sometimes, causing the whole program to crash.
2.10.8 Level Terrain:
=======================
This button lets you pick a tile, then level surround tiles to that tile's
elevation. This is a nice way to flatten land out. In the PC & DOS versions,
this seems to affect an area of nine tiles under your bulldozer instead of just
the one. There are also some quirks that make this feature difficult to use
sometimes.
2.10.9 Raise Sea Level:
=========================
This button increases the sea level by 100 ft. Any trees or ponds that are
covered up will be destroyed.
The button decreases the sea level by 100 ft. You can completely eliminate any
navigable water with this tool.
There is a neat trick you can do with this tool. Any waterfalls on the terrain
that have been covered with water using this tool will yield interesting
glitches when the water is lowered below where the waterfalls were. There are
some neat things you can do with this glitch, where more information can be
found in Section 7 (T T C).
2.10.11 Place Water:
======================
This button lets you create ponds or small streams by "waterizing" any tile you
click on. This is useful for creating areas especially suited for water pumps.
2.10.12 Place Stream:
=======================
This button lets you create streams. One click and a stream sprouts forth,
generally flowing downhill. If it's created on level terrain, it will follow a
random path.
2.10.13 Place Tree:
=====================
This button lets you plant one tree with each click. You can fill up tiles with
several trees by clicking on those tiles over and over.
If you want to remove trees without having to right click or select the
bulldozer tool simply hold down [Shift] while clicking with the tree tool. This
will remove all trees from the tile with a single click.
2.10.14 Place Forest:
=======================
This button lets you create forests of any size or density. It behaves a lot
like the spray paint button in most picture editing programs.
If you'd like to remove whole forests in similar fashion to removing trees via
the shift-click method, then simply hold down [Shift] while clicking with the
tool. This basically reverses the process of planting forests.
2.10.15 Zoom In & Zoom Out:
=============================
These buttons increase and decrease the view of your terrain in and out. Pretty
straightforward.
2.10.16 Rotate Clockwise and Rotate Counter-Clockwise:
========================================================
These buttons rotate your view of the terrain.
2.10.17 Center:
=================
Behaves just like the center tool in the City Toolbar.
2.10.18 Help:
===============
Behaves just like the help button in the City Toolbar.
2.10.19 Done:
===============
This is the button you click when you're done editing your terrain. From here,
you'll be prompted to name your city and decide which year and difficulty level
you'd like to use.
Not all disasters can occur randomly; some will only be found in various
scenarios. All of the disasters can be selected either through the Disasters
menu, or through a debug menu, which is explained in the Tips and Tricks
section (T T C). Of course, no disasters will occur randomly if you've disabled
them in the Disasters menu. =P
3.1 Fire:
===========
A fire in SC2K is any instance where one or more tiles are on fire. These are
easily recognizable because the tile will literally be on fire, flames licking
about. A tile will remain on fire until the fuel source within that tile
(trees, buildings, etc.) runs out, at which point the fire extinguishes itself
leaving behind a pile of rubble. By this time, the fire has usually spread to
nearby tiles, and so on and so forth. Left unchecked, fires can (and most
likely will) destroy an entire city. Fires are generally a random occurrence,
but their likelihood will increase in the following circumstances:
- No fire departments.
- Lots of trees and rubble.
- High temperatures.
- The presence of rioters.
- Poorly located Airports (don't exactly cause fires, but they do increases
air crashes, which in turn can lead to fires).
If you make sure these circumstances are not prevalent in your city, then you
shouldn't have much to worry about. In the case a fire DOES break out, it's
important to have a plan of action.
Pause the game and demolish all the buildings, trees, roads, and rubble
surrounding the fire. For small one or two-tile fires, surround them with fire
dispatches. You have one dispatch available for each fire station, and there is
an upper limit of 33 dispatches available. When you have placed all of your
fire crews, placing a new one will remove the dispatch you first placed and put
it in that spot.
After you feel you have every fire contained, set the simulator speed to Turtle
and make sure you don't see any fires spreading. If you keep hearing explosion
sounds a long time after containing your fires, then one of them is still
spreading.
You'll know when all the fires are gone when new music plays and a newspaper
comes up telling you about the event. Go ahead and reconstruct the destroyed
roads and power lines. Zones should still be intact regardless if the buildings
on them were destroyed.
---PlayStation Note---
In the PlayStation version, it was possible to plop ponds on active fires that
have already destroyed everything in the occupied tile, effectively eliminating
them.
3.2 Flood:
============
Floods are marked by blue water sloshing around on previously dry tiles. They
are peculiar in that they only destroy buildings. Roads and trees will remain
intact. In fact, I used to think trees protected against floods but testing has
proven otherwise. Generally a random occurrence, floods can be precipitated by
wet weather along with the presence of rivers and oceans. Ponds can also cause
floods. A city with no water whatsoever will not randomly flood, although you
can still cause them if you so wish.
The best way to defend yourself again floods is to construct dikes along your
shores. These are simply lengths of raised terrain along your coasts. One level
is all it takes, and those floods will find themselves buffeted by your
ingenuity. If you have seaports, which must always be at sea level, then they
will always be at risks for floods.
If you don't have dikes built, you can use firemen and police to barrier
against the impending water. However, unless you have a LOT of these, you'll
only be able to preserve a few choice buildings, not reduce the damage as a
whole.
Cleaning up the damage isn't too bad. After the flood has run its course,
simply rebuild your power lines, along with any buildings you constructed, and
the zones should pick themselves right up.
3.3 Air Crash:
================
Air crashes are instances of flying aircraft hitting the ground or tall
buildings. When they crash, there is a small chance of a fire occurring. It's a
very small chance, though, so I find air crashes to be one of the most
insignificant disasters in the game. These will not randomly occur if your city
has no airport, but you can still cause them through the Disasters menu. You
can also cause them by clicking the center tool repeatedly on a helicopter,
causing it to spiral to its doom. Assuming a crash does occur, check out the
crash scene for any possible damage, and clean up any fires that might occur as
well.
3.4 Tornado:
==============
Tornadoes are easily recognizable as brown vortices of dust and debris
traversing the cityscape. Their path is randomly determined, although they
generally follow a straight line. Tornadoes will randomly appear anywhere in
your city (even over water), then move in any direction in a relatively
straight line off the edge of the map into cybernetic oblivion. They destroy
everything in their path, and may actually piddle out rather quickly if they've
destroyed a lot. I've never seen them create any fires, and they seem more
prevalent on flat plains.
When tornadoes have done their business, simply reconstruct your roads and
power lines, along with any civic buildings that have been destroyed.
3.5 Earthquake:
=================
An earthquake is the only disaster that is not influenced by city conditions;
all cities are fair game. You'll know an earthquake by a brief period of
shaking followed by random fires and destruction throughout your city.
It's imperative that you contain all of the fires immediately, and it's also
important to make sure that you've contained every single fire. Once that's
done, you have a long road ahead of you when it comes to rebuilding.
3.6 Monster:
==============
Monsters are easily recognized as floating, black, rotund, Cyclopean legged
creatures that move about your city doing their business. Monsters are
particularly bizarre in that they don't always cause destruction, per se. Some
times they'll plant trees, water, or wind generators. Many times, though, they
cause fires, so have your fire crews follow the beasts putting out any fires
that should appear. Meanwhile, see if you can't shoo the things away with
police or military dispatch.
I've noticed that the leg pattern the monster uses seems to indicate what the
monster is doing.
If the legs are randomly gyrating about the monster is currently looking for
stuff to destroy, or it is currently destroying stuff.
If the legs are behaving in a jellyfish-like way (the whole leg is moving),
then the monster is either trying to avoid something, change its course of
direction, or getting ready to leave.
If the legs are still with just the tips moving, then the monster is leaving,
it will no longer destroy stuff.
3.7 Hurricane:
================
Hurricanes are marked by the presence of howling winds and extreme flooding
along the coast. If your city has no coast, hurricanes will not occur randomly,
but you can still cause them if you wish. In that case, the flooding will occur
along a random edge of the city (looks kind of hokey but whatever).
The high winds can knock down buildings anywhere in your city, while the
flooding will destroy all the buildings along the coast, assuming they're at
sea level.
After hurricanes run their course, clean up the mess and reconstruct your power
lines and buildings.
3.8 Rioters:
==============
Rioters appear as a group of Sims (this is the only instance in the game where
you actually see the Sims) carrying signs and traveling about on roads, booing
all the while. They occur randomly, although any number of factors from hot
weather to high taxes can hasten their arrival. As they move about, they divide
and multiply, and they also cause fires. Although rioters are generally limited
to roads, they can sometimes leave the roads, in which case they know no
bounds, multiplying like crazy until the entire city is covered (having seen it
myself, I can tell you that the image is quite intimidating).
Squelch the rioters with police, and put out any fires with your firemen.
---The following disasters must be activated through the Debug menu---
3.9 Melt Down:
================
Melt downs are primarily associated with nuclear power plants that have been
overloaded beyond their capacity. This can happen if your city consumes more
power than your nuclear power plant generates (assuming there aren't any other
power plants supplanting your nuclear power plant), or if your power plant has
exceeded its 50 year life span. Assuming the latter is the case, a melt down
will only occur if you have disasters enabled.
When a melt down occurs, the entire nuclear power plant will be destroyed,
while fires and radiation sprinkle the radius of ground zero. In other words,
there will be more occurrences of radiation closer to the explosion than there
will be farther away. Clean up the fires, then rebuild as best as you can with
the radiation present. You will not be able to construct anything on an
irradiated tile (you'll see a flashing radiation symbol). If one of them is in
the way of a road you're trying to build, you'll have to build around it.
Querying radiation will show that it pollutes quite a lot, so much so that you
can see the effect on the pollution map. Radiation is pretty much permanent,
although it gradually wears off after enough time. It will start wearing off
around 10-20 thousands years in, and takes a few hundred thousand years to wear
off completely (yeah, I actually verified this). Radiation isn't terribly
significant as a threatening presence in your city. Looks kind of cool,
actually...
3.10 Microwave:
=================
Microwave disasters occur when the orbiting satellite beaming the microwaves
back to your microwave power plant misses and hits something else instead. This
disaster can occur randomly, but not if your city doesn't have a microwave
power plant, even if you select it from the Debug menu. You'll know this
disaster has occurred when you see a large fire directly next to your power
plant. If you're lucky, you'll manage to save the power plant before the fire
consumes it, so I would suggest that be your first priority. If you lose the
power plant, don't despair. Go ahead and clean up the rest of the fire before
it grows out of control.
3.11 Volcano:
===============
Volcanoes are highly visual disasters that cause a LOT of destruction. They
never occur randomly, and can only be activated through the debug menu. The
Portland scenario features a volcano, but that's it. Volcanoes are simply too
traumatic and disastrous, and allowing them to occur randomly would've pissed
off many a gamer.
Volcanoes can be spotted as a growing hill upon which toxic clouds and fires
sprout. The toxic clouds will flow downhill from the volcano into your city,
causing the buildings they touch to become abandoned. Volcanoes can vary in
size, from very small to the highest the simulator will allow ground to go. If
your computer is slow, volcanoes might take a while to finish.
When volcanoes have run their course, make sure to clean up the fires and
rebuild as best as you can. They will leave you with a huge hill as an
everlasting reminder of its presence. You'll probably want to level it out,
however, as it takes up a lot of real estate.
3.12 Fire Storm:
==================
Fire storms are not unlike fires, except that they start out as 8x8 patches of
fire which can spread very quickly. They don't occur randomly, and only various
scenarios will feature them.
Controlling a fire storm is fairly straightforward. Pause the simulator, and
then demolish all of the buildings along its perimeter. It will take a while
for the fire to die down on its own, but you can speed up its departure by
dispatching fire crews to the scene.
3.13 Mass Riots:
==================
Mass rights are similar to regular riots, except that they start out with
several groups of rioters as opposed to just one group. They'll grow out of
hand very quickly unless you act immediately. As with regular riots, stop the
riots with police, and the fires with firemen. If you have a military presence,
they can also contribute.
3.14 Major Flood:
===================
Basically the same as regular floods, major floods are simply larger. However,
they are still confounded by simple dikes, so if you're protected against
floods, don't let major floods worry you too much.
3.15 Toxic Spill:
===================
Toxic spills can occur randomly, but their presence is even more likely if
there are a lot of polluting industries and power plants in your city. They
tend to flow downhill, but follow a randomly determined path on level terrain.
From my experience, police dispatches seem particularly effective at putting an
end to these things. They look like gray clouds, floating around where they see
fit. Any building they touch will become abandoned. They're not hard to deal
with, but you'll want to fix their cause lest they come around again sometime
in the future.
This section is devoted to the various windows of SC2K. The parts on some
windows are significantly larger than the parts on other windows because of
their significance to the game play. All of these windows can be open either
through the Windows menu, the City Toolbar, or their respective shortcuts
(Windows only).
========================================
Section 4.1: The Budget Window BGT
========================================
Windows Shortcut: Ctrl+B
The Budget Window is one of the most important aspects of SC2K. Sure, there's
an "Auto-Budget" feature, but sooner or later you'll be coming around here to
tinker with this or that.
To access the Budget window, you can open the "Windows" menu in the top menu
bar, and select the budget window, or you can click on the budget window button
(the green dollar sign $) in the city toolbar. Once open, you'll see several
pieces of important information.
In the upper left-hand corner you'll see your city's name and the year and
month you opened this particular instance of the Budget window. Below that,
you'll see the names of the various departments over which you have financial
control, which I'll explain later. To the right you'll see various numerical
data showing how much each department has cost/profited you, and how much that
department is expected to cost/profit you by year's end. To the furthest right
you'll see two columns of buttons (books and query bubbles). Clicking on the
book icon of a department allows you to "open the books" and see detailed
information on that department or it allows you to make changes to that
department. Clicking the query icon allows you to see whatever comments the
advisors for the departments have. Most of them are pretty sane. The TA advisor
though...
4.1.1 The Departments:
========================
Property Taxes:
---------------
Displays the tax percentage you have selected.
Property taxes are a direct tax on your Sims. You can tax the Sims anywhere
from 0% to 20%, based on your needs and/or sadistic desires. Every time you
lower taxes, you'll hear cheers, and every time you raise taxes, you'll hear
raucous boos from your ever vocal Sims. The tax itself is a basic formula.
Suffice it to say, the higher the tax, the more money you get. This always
holds true, until your Sims get pissed off at your ridiculous taxes and decide
to pack up and leave for another place. The revenue accrued from taxes is also
dependent on your city's land value. A high land value results in more money
for you. An appropriate tax rate depends on the kind of city you have. A large
population with high land value can afford lower taxes, while smaller cities,
even with high taxes, will still be scrambling to save up money for growth.
If you set your taxes to 0%, your Sims will undoubtedly be happy about this,
but your city will go broke unless you have some other source of money...like
cheating...or something...
Opening the books on taxes allows you to set taxes for specific zones.
City Ordinances:
----------------
Displays the costs and profits resulting from the various ordinances you have
enacted.
Opening the books on ordinances will open the Ordinances Window (which can also
be opened from the Windows Menu in the menu bar (Windows shortcut Ctrl+O)
City ordinances are further explained below (O D N).
Bond Payments:
--------------
Before I get started here, allow me to state that in my honest opinion, bonds
are the worst thing that can happen to your city. If you must absolutely take a
bond out on your city, be aware that paying it back is going to require
tenacity and determination. This is especially true for smaller cities. In
fact, if the interest rates are high, you'll literally find yourself consumed
by rampant and unforgiving loan sharks. Forget this, and you'll see your city
crumble, earning you a mayoral booting.
When you open the Bonds window, you'll see any current interest payments you
are making, any current bonds that you have floated, and the interest rates.
The interest rate you pay is determine by the federal interest rate, which
changes by a percent or two every few months, as can be seen in the graphs
window. Your bank will choose an interest rate above that, with the difference
being determined by your loan rating. The better your loan rating, the smaller
the difference between the federal rate and your bank's rate will be (in other
words, it'll be cheaper). Obviously, if you're going to take out a bond, it's
preferable to have low interest rates.
In the bonds window you'll see four buttons: "Show Bonds," "Issue Bonds,"
"Repay Bonds," and "Done." To take out a bond, click on the "Issue Bond" button
and a message window will pop up informing you of the current interest rate and
asking if you really want to take a bond out. To view information on your
bonds, select the "Show Bonds" button to see the relevant information. In this
window you'll see the outstanding bonds that you have, your loan rating (AAA to
F), the total value of all your bonds, and the interest rate of your next bond.
The City Value is the value of your city's buildings and infrastructure, but
not the zoned buildings that have been built by your Sims. The City Value
determines how many bonds you can take out, since your city is used as
collateral. To pay a bond back, click on the "Repay Bond" button to repay your
oldest outstanding bond. You must pay your bonds in the order that you issued
them.
Opening the books on bonds allows you to manage your bonds.
Police Department:
------------------
Displays the percentage of funding you are providing for the police department
(0-100%).
When determining how much to fund your police department, keep in mind that
crime will rise when you lower the funding. Only lower it if your city is
dangerously close to red ink.
Opening the books on the police department allows you to view finance
information regarding the police for the past year.
Fire Department:
----------------
Displays the percentage of funding you are providing for the fire department
(0-100%).
When determining how much to fund your fire department, keep in mind that the
likelihood of a fire increases when funding is lowered. This is a non-issue if
you have disasters enabled, in which case you might not have any fire stations
at all.
Opening the books on the fire department allows you to view finance information
regarding the fire department for the past year.
Health and Welfare:
-------------------
Displays the percentage of funding you are providing for hospitals (0-100%).
When determining how much to fund your hospitals, keep in mind that lowering
the funding will result in lower LE (Life Expectancy).
Opening the books on health and welfare allows you to view finance information
regarding your hospitals for the past year.
Education:
----------
Displays the percentage of funding you are providing for education facilities
(0-100%).
When determining how much to fund your education buildings, keep in mind that
lower the funding will result in lower EQ (Education Quotient).
Opening the books on education allows you to set funding for specific
educational facilities i.e. schools, libraries, museums and colleges.
Transit Authority:
------------------
Displays the percentage of funding you are providing for transportation
facilities (0-100%).
When determining how much to fund the TA, keep in mind that funding anything
less than 100% results in an enraged TA advisor screaming at you "YOU CAN'T CUT
BACK ON FUNDING! YOU WILL REGRET THIS!" Seriously, I don't know what his
problem is, but that's what he'll say if you're not funding the TA 100%. More
importantly, if you're not funding 100% you'll soon notice your roads, rails,
bridges, etc. beginning to crumble. Let this continue, and there will be no
transportation in your city at all. Now you know why the TA has an aneurism
when you don't fund him...
Opening the books on the TA will allow you to set funding for specific
transportation elements like roads, bridges, subways, etc.
From IcthyoidMecha:
"In the Windows 95 version, nothing bad happens to subways if you remove
funding. They will still function properly at 0% funding without loss of track,
unlike roads or rails."
---
At the bottom of the budget window you'll see all of your costs and credits
tallied up, showing you if your budget is going to increase or decrease that
year.
Well, that's the budget window of SC2K. Use it carefully, for just as it can be
a tool for fun and profit, it can be used for doom and gloom...whichever you
prefer...
============================================
Section 4.2: The Ordinances Window ODN
============================================
Windows shortcut: Ctrl+O
This window displays all of the ordinances available, showing you which ones
you've enacted, their costs or profits, the total YTD (year to date)
cost/profit, and the total estimated year-end cost/profit. There are five kinds
of ordinances.
Be careful not to have more ordinances enacted than your coffers can afford. If
you find that you must cut down on city services in order to stay out of the
red, deselect the most expensive ones first.
These ordinances provide your city with extra cash, and most of them are simply
additional taxes or other form of fines. For the most part, these ordinances
will perturb your Sims, but not too much.
1% Sales Tax:
-------------
This ordinance taxes the Sims in your commercial sector. While it brings in
money, it does have a slight negative effect on your city's commerce. The
amount of money this ordinance provides is somewhat substantial, so it does
have its uses. However, it's not your best choice every time.
1% Income Tax:
--------------
This ordinance taxes Sims in your residential sector. While it does bring in a
hefty sum, it also has a moderate negative impact on the growth of your
residential zones. Definitely the biggest money-maker in the game, this
ordinance can give you that much-needed money for a new stadium or bridge, but
can also be used to counteract a costly ordinance. Whether or not you implement
it is a personal choice.
Legalized Gambling:
-------------------
This ordinance will bring in money from your commercial sector. It's not like a
tax, so it won't necessarily harm your commerce, at least not directly. What it
does do is increase crime throughout your city. This can be a good idea, but
only for the short term. If you allow this ordinance to be in effect for too
long crime in your city can grow out of control. Be careful with it.
Parking Fines:
--------------
This ordinance brings in money from the residential sector. Interestingly
enough, the negative impact of this ordinance falls not on the residential
zones but the commercial zones. It also reduces traffic, which bugs the Sims,
but not you (at least I hope not). This particular ordinance does not bring in
a whole lot of money, and I only recommend it if you need some quick cash.
Otherwise, let it be.
These ordinances all cost money, and they all serve to benefit the overall
education of your Sims.
Pro-Reading Campaign:
---------------------
This ordinance serves to increase the education quotient of your Sims after
they leave school. It's not terribly expensive, and it certainly pays off when
those high-tech industries start moving into your city.
Anti-Drug Campaign:
-------------------
This ordinance helps to reduce crime in your city. If you decide to legalize
gambling, be sure to enact this ordinance as well to help counteract the
negative effects.
CPR Training:
-------------
This ordinance helps to increase the life expectancy of your Sims. It costs
about the same as the Pro-Reading Campaign.
Neighborhood Watch:
-------------------
This ordinance helps to reduce crime in your city. Once again, be sure to enact
this if you legalize gambling.
4.2.3 Safety & Health Ordinances:
===================================
These ordinances all cost money, and they all benefit the well-being and
livelihood of your Sims.
Volunteer Fire Department:
--------------------------
This ordinance sets up a volunteer fire crew that helps with putting out fires.
While especially useful in smaller cities, its effect noticeably decreases as
your city grows. In fact, I'd recommend quitting it once your city reaches a
moderate size.
Public Smoking Ban:
-------------------
This ordinance will help increase the overall life expectancy of your Sims,
although it will have a slightly negative impact on your commercial sector.
Enacting this ordinance is really more of a personal life choice, since going
one way or the other doesn't have a remarkable impact.
Free Clinics:
-------------
This ordinance helps increase the overall life expectancy of your Sims. There's
no negative impact on anything, so the only reason you wouldn't want to do it
is because of its costs, which are a bit on the higher end.
Junior Sports:
--------------
This double-duty ordinance increases life expectancy AND reduces crime. Since
it's not particularly expensive, I'd say go for it.
These ordinances, all of which cost money, increase the amount of tourism your
city receives. This helps boost the commercial sector of your city.
Tourist Advertising:
--------------------
This ordinance increases the amount of activity in your tourism industry. Other
than that...I don't know. If you do enact it, make sure there's something in
your city worth seeing, although that really doesn't matter all too much.
Business Advertising:
---------------------
This ordinance helps increase industrial growth in your city. If you enact it,
make sure your city's infrastructure can accommodate the growth.
City Beautification:
--------------------
This ordinance will increase residential growth and overall land value.
Annual Carnival:
----------------
This ordinance will boost your tourism industry and it will also serve to
increase commercial growth. I've noticed that the impact of this ordinance is
almost nonexistent in small cities. I'd wait until you have a larger city
before thinking about this one.
4.2.5 Other Ordinances:
=========================
These ordinances are basically miscellaneous services that make your city a
better place. One of them, Nuclear Free Zone, is free of charge, and it
prevents you from placing any nuclear power plants in your city. It's more of a
political thing then anything else.
Energy Conservation:
--------------------
This ordinance takes a while to become noticeable, but it is worth enacting if
you find yourself struggling to meet the ever-increasing power demands of your
city. If you can afford the really expensive power plants (microwave, fusion)
then it's not necessarily important.
Nuclear-Free Zone:
------------------
This is the only ordinance that neither costs, nor gives any money. It's most
noticeable effect is that you can no longer construct nuclear power plants.
Also, any pre-existing nuclear power plants will not be replaced when they burn
out. There is also a small boost for your residential sector. This ordinance is
really nothing more than a way for you to make a personal statement about how
you feel in regards to nuclear energy. Do note, however, that even with this
ordinance enabled, the military can still construct missile silos in your city
if you let them.
Homeless Shelters:
------------------
This ordinance helps reduce the unemployment rate, and it also increases the
overall land value. You probably didn't even realize there were homeless people
in your city. Well, now you know.
Pollution Controls:
-------------------
This ordinance will help reduce overall pollution from automobiles and
industry. Obviously, it also has a slight negative effect on industry as well.
Indirectly, this ordinance will also increase your Sims' life expectancy since
LE is influenced by pollution. If you're worried about your industry faltering,
you can takes steps to increase educational services in your city that will
attract high-tech, non-polluting industries.
========================================
Section 4.3: Population Window PLN
========================================
Windows shortcut: Ctrl+C
The Population Window provides statistical data on the demographics of your
city's Sims. There are three kinds of data that can be viewed in this window by
selecting the appropriate radio button (regular buttons in the DOS version).
The buttons are labeled Population, Health, and Education.
4.3.1 Population:
===================
When you have this button selected, the window will display a bar graph showing
the distribution of Sims among the various ages as a percentage. On the y-axis
(vertical) you will see a scale of percentages, while the x-axis (horizontal,
labeled "Resident Age") shows a scale of ages. The height of the bar over a
given age range indicates the percentage of Sims that fall under that age
range. If the heights of all the bars were added up, they'd total out at 100%.
You'll also see a bracket from the age of 20 to 55, indicating the ages during
which Sims can be employed. The label for this bracket ("Work Force % = x")
indicates the percentage of Sims that can be employed.
4.3.2 Health:
===============
This button will display the life expectancy (LE) of Sims based on their age.
Naturally, younger Sims who have access to more advanced medical care will have
a longer life expectancy than older Sims who had to deal with less-advanced
health care. The y-axis will display the LE in years, while the x-axis remains
the same as the one in the previous setting. The bracket indicating the work
force indicates the average LE of Sims in the work force. LE is affected by the
presence of hospitals and other life-affecting variables like pollution.
4.3.3 Education:
==================
This button displays the education quotient (EQ) of the Sims in your city based
on their age. The y-axis displays the EQ (0-150) while the x-axis displays the
age range, just like in the other two windows. As you can see, very young Sims
have a low EQ, which rises sharply as they progress through school and college.
Afterward, their EQ will deteriorate unless it is bolstered by the presence of
libraries and museums, which adult Sims frequent. Usually, this graph will have
the appearance of rising sharply, then slowly tapering downward as the Sims
age. The work force bracket indicates the average EQ of the employable Sims.
The higher the EQ of these Sims, the more high-tech industry will want to
develop in your city. This, in turn, will result in lower pollution, which
makes everyone happy. EQ takes a very long time to fully develop, as it
requires one or two generations to fully come around.
==========================================
Section 4.4: The Industry Window INY
==========================================
Windows shortcut: Ctrl+I
The Industry Window is a handy tool that lets you micromanage the industries in
your city, of which there are 11 types:
These various industrial sectors differ in regards to their benefits/costs to
your city. Some of them pollute a lot, while others require a high EQ for
development. Like the Population Window, there are three selections you can
make to view various data related to industry.
Ratios:
-------
This selection will show you the rate at which the various industries are being
produced. Industries that produce a lot will have the highest ratios. These
industries also tend to be in higher demand (which is why so much is being
produced to begin with), and they also tend to bring in more money when it
comes to taxes. If your city was some how communist/socialist, you'd be able to
specify just how much each industry produced...we all have our dreams...
Tax Rates:
----------
Here you can specify how much each industry will be taxed (0-20%). The vertical
dotted line represents the average tax rate of all the industries together. You
can set the individual tax rates by clicking and holding on one of the bars and
moving it back and forth for the desired tax rate. Consequently, you'll notice
the appropriate industry begin to falter or grow. If you have a particular
dislike for certain industries, you may max out their tax rates accordingly.
Demand:
-------
This selection simply shows the demand for each industry. It's usually pretty
similar to the Ratios since it directly affects them.
========================================
Section 4.5: The Graphs Window GRP
========================================
Windows shortcut: Ctrl+G
This is probably one of the more useful windows in SC2K, since it provides
numerical data on several aspects of your city. When you open this window, you
will see a graph that shows the data you've checked versus time. There are 16
kinds of data you can view, and three time scales you can select from (1 year,
10 years, or 100 years).
- City Size (C or S): Checking this will display the total population of your
city.
- Residents (R): This will display the total residential population of your
city.
- Commerce (C): This will display the total commercial population of your
city.
- Industry (I): This will display the total industrial population of your
city.
- Traffic (T): This will display the average traffic of your city.
- Pollution (P): This will display the average pollution of your city.
- Value (V): This will display the average land value of your city.
- Crime (C or X): This will display the average crime rate of your city.
- Power % (p): This will display the percentage of power available from all of
your power plants.
- Water % (w): This will display the percentage of water available from all of
your pumps.
- Health (h): This will display the average LE of your Sims.
- Education (e): This will display the average EQ of your Sims.
- Unemployment (u): This will display the unemployment rate of your city.
- GNF (g): This will display the Gross National Product of SimNation
(sometimes shown as GNP).
- Nat'n Pop. (n): This will display the total population of SimNation.
- Fed Rate (%): This will display the federal interest rate set by SimNation's
Fed, which in turns determines the interest rates of the loans you take out.
You can display any combination of those data on your graph, or all of them
(although they'll be hard to discern at that point). The graph displays real-
time information, so you can leave the window open to see current trends in
your city.
===========================================
Section 4.6: The Neighbors Window NGH
===========================================
Windows shortcut: Ctrl+H
This window will display a small picture showing your city in relation with
your four neighboring cities. If your city has a coast, one of your neighbors
will simply be a blue ocean labeled "Ocean." The names of your neighbors are
randomly determined (more details in Section 5 (S F T)). The sizes of your
neighbors are related to how well your city is doing. However, they will never
grow larger than about 5 million apiece. At that point, their populations
fluctuate between 5 million and 4.9 million. Also displayed in this window is
the population of SimNation, which never grows larger than about 5 billion.
Depending on how large your city is, the graphic which represents it will show
anything from a few buildings and roads to a sprawling metropolis. This window
displays real-time information, so you can leave it open as your city runs.
=====================================
Section 4.7: The Map Window MPA
=====================================
Windows shortcut: Ctrl+M
This window is also one of the more useful ones in SC2K, as it has a lot of
handy features. When you open it, you will see a map of your city where brown
indicates undeveloped land, green indicates forested land, blue indicates
water, black indicates developed land that you've built on, and yellow
indicates rubble. Depending on the particular map you've selected, this basic
map will be covered with other kinds of data. At the bottom of the window is a
check box reading "Show City in Window." This check box lets you filter the
data on the map directly on to the city, helping you pinpoint exactly where
various effects are occurring (everything in your city will be blank to make
this data more clear). In the DOS version, this check box is represented by a
icon with blue tiles on it. There are 9 types of data that can be viewed, and
each of these types may also have a few options. Not all types of data can be
filtered directly on to the city.
Structures:
-----------
This map simply indicates what land has been developed, as described in the
opening paragraph on the Map Window.
This map cannot be filtered.
Zones:
------
This map is the same as the above, except zones are also color-coded. The
colors are the same as for those you would see in undeveloped zones.
This map cannot be filtered.
Roads:
------
This map indicates all the roads and highways in your city with white lines.
This map cannot be filtered.
Rails:
------
This map indicates all the railroads in your city with white lines.
This map cannot be filtered.
Traffic:
--------
This map indicates the amount of traffic on your roads and rails in shades of
gray. The darker the gray, the more traffic there is.
Filtering this map produces similar results in shades of blue. Blank tiles have
no traffic.
Power:
------
This map shows your city's power grid along with which sections are receiving
electricity. Sections in yellow are powered, sections in red are not. White
lines indicate the power lines you have constructed. In some cases, it can be
difficult to see very small sections that are not powered, so look carefully.
When filtered, Green tiles represent powered areas, while red tiles represent
areas lacking power. Blank tiles indicate areas that do not have power supply
systems in place. It's much easier using this filter to discern un-powered
zones and areas.
Water Supply:
-------------
This map is identical to the above except that it represents the water system.
White lines indicate water mains you have built. When there is a low water
supply, you will see a diamond pattern in the center of your city representing
watered sections, regardless of where your water pumps are. The size of this
diamond depends on the deficit your water supply has.
When filtered, Green tiles represent watered areas, while red tiles represent
areas lacking water. Blank tiles indicate areas that do not have water systems
in place.
Density:
--------
This map indicates the population density of your city in varying shades of
gray, with darker shades indicating heavier densities. Blank areas have no
population.
When filtered, the density will be indicated with shades of blue. Blank tiles
have no population.
Rate of Growth:
---------------
This map indicates the population change in all parts of the city. Green areas
indicate growing population, red areas indicate decreasing population, and
blank areas indicate no significant population change.
When filtered, growing populations are shown by green tiles with plus signs (+)
and shrinking populations are shown by red tiles with minus signs (-). Blank
areas have no significant population changes.
Crime Rate:
-----------
This map shows you what the crime rate in your city is with varying shades of
gray. The darker the gray, the heavier the crime is. Blank areas have no crime.
Filtering this map produces similar results in shades of blue, with blank tiles
indicating little or no crime.
Police Power:
-------------
This map will show the area of effect for each police station in your city. The
circular areas are darker in the center where the police station is, getting
lighter at the edges. Cities with good transportation systems and well-funded
police departments will find light-gray lines following the roads outside the
areas of effect, indicating that some police stations are able to patrol
outside their area of effect. One can see that this map is closely related to
the Crime Rate map.
Filtering this map produces similar results in shades of blue, with blank tiles
indicating a total lack of police coverage.
Police Departments:
-------------------
This map will show the locations of all your police departments with white
dots.
This map cannot be filtered.
Pollution:
----------
This map indicates any pollution in your city, along with the severity in any
given area. A lighter gray color indicates light pollution, while a darker gray
indicates heavy pollution.
Filtering this map will display pollution levels in shades of blue in a similar
fashion as in the map. Blank tiles do not have pollution.
Land Value:
-----------
This map indicates land values in your city in shades of gray. A dark gray
color indicates a high land value. Blank areas represent undeveloped land.
When filtered, this map will display similar results in shades of blue, with
blank tiles indicating undeveloped land.
Fire Power:
-----------
This map is identical to the Police Power map, showing the effect of fire
departments.
Fire Departments:
-----------------
This map is identical to the Police Departments map, showing the locating of
fire departments.
Schools:
--------
This map shows the location of all your schools with white dots.
This map cannot be filtered.
Colleges:
---------
This map shows the location of all your colleges with white dots.
5.1 The Neighboring Cities:
=============================
While you may not pay a lot of attention to those neighboring cities of yours,
it's important to realize that without them, you're just a burg in the middle
of nowhere. As fanciful as that might sound, it's also impractical.
When it comes to the simulator, the neighbors are there to provide a means of
connection between you and SimNation. They will develop along with your city
(although no self-respecting SimMayor should have any problem outpacing their
neighbors' growth). You can connect to all four of your neighbors or none at
all. Their names are randomly selected from this list of 36:
Ashland Fort Verdegris Mill Valley Schwinton
Aurac Fortune New Boots Serviland
Avon Harpersville Newton Sinistrel
Blake Hoek Creek Oak Creek Stars County
Cats Corner Jenna Petaluma Stimpleton
Cherryton Jeromi Phippsville Tent Pegs
Denmont Krighton Pioneers Villa
Dexter Lister PortVille Washers Grove
Eubanks Little Rouge Rimmer Yestonia
I'm sure many of those names may seem a little "country" for you, but as a
resident of So. Oregon myself, I think they're perfect (no, really, there is a
city named Ashland here). It's not all uncommon for two or more of your
neighboring cities to receive the same name. I recall feeling somewhat
apprehensive when I saw that all four of my neighbors were named Stars County.
If, when creating your city in the terrain editor, you selected an ocean, then
one of your neighbors will be named "Ocean" but it will not have a population.
However, you can still build connections to "Ocean" assuming there is a land
bridge across the ocean.
When you build connections to your neighbors, a sign will appear indicating the
name of the neighbor along with a number which I believe designates the
distance (this number is always 5, 6, 7, 8, or 9, and it increments as you go
along the edge of your city, tile by tile). Beyond that, there isn't much else
to say about neighbors.
5.2 The Newspapers:
=====================
The main purpose of the papers in SC2K is to inform you of what's happening in
your city and the world in general. Important articles will usually tell you
what problems your city has, what kind of disaster has recently occurred, and
what inventions have recently been made. Thrown in with these are befuddling
human interest stories that quite frankly would never see the light of day in a
real paper. With headlines like "Capitalist Running Dog Lackeys Infiltrate
Embassy" one isn't sure just what to make of the article within. The actual
articles are really just a computer-generated form of Madlibs that make a
little bit more sense. This is to prevent the articles from getting too old too
fast. Your city can have a maximum of six papers (Times, Chronicle, Courier,
Picayune, Herald and Journal), some of which include photos. It doesn't take
long to learn that giving an interesting name to a city will result in some
strange articles.
You can choose to receive the subscription, which comes twice a year, the
Extra! editions, which occur when inventions and city milestones have occurred,
or neither. However, you'll still receive papers after disasters have occurred.
If you read lots of papers, you're likely to receive a popup indicating that
your citizens have thrown a parade in your honor.
---PlayStation Note---
In the PlayStation version, you can only look at article headlines, not the
articles themselves. =/
5.3 The City Council:
=======================
While you may think that the city council has no mind of its own, you should
know otherwise. There are occasions when the city council will pass an
ordinance or two on its own without even alerting you. It's really no big deal
because it doesn't happen too often. All you need to do is open the Ordinances
window and turn off the newly-enacted ordinance. You usually find out this
happened in the first place because of the newspaper.
5.4 "What's it called?" or Names of Buildings (and teams):
============================================================
There are some things in SC2K that have interesting names. Here we will see
just what they are, and where some of them come from.
First Light (Capt. J. Scirica):
-------------------------------
This is the name given to every small boat you see in SC2K. It's named after
Joe Scirica, who at the time (and perhaps still is) was the V.P. of Maxis
product development. Whether or not Mr. Scirica was really that fond of sailing
is beyond me.
Industrial thingamajig:
-----------------------
This name is given to one of the 3x3 industrial buildings. I guess the
developers didn't think it looked enough like a factory to warrant that name.
Maybe they were trying to be funny...what the hell am I talking about? In this
game they're always trying to be funny.
Braun Llama Dome:
-----------------
This is one of the rewards you get in SC2K (after reaching a population of
80,000). It's named after Jeff Braun, who was the CEO of Maxis.
Stadium:
--------
There are a total of five different sports you can choose from (Football,
Baseball, Soccer, Cricket and Rugby). Depending on which one you select, a
certain name will appear.
Football - Llamas
Baseball - Alpacas
Soccer - Camels
Cricket - Dromedaries
Rugby - Army Ants
Now, you're not stuck with these names. You can always choose your own if you
wish (but once you make a choice you're stuck with it).
5.5 Viewing the Version Info (Windows 95 only):
=================================================
If you take a look at the properties of SC2K (find the directory the program is
stored in, then right-click and select "Properties" in the context menu) you
will see something interesting. Click on the "Version" tab and take a look at
the comment.
. . .
(for those of you lacking the game or are too lazy to go about this task, here
is the phrase in question):
"He tried to kill me with a forklift!"
I don't know what's going on there, but that's how it is. Maybe it's a poor
soul's cry for help...
I received this e-mail from Nicholas Fairfield:
"Well, you may have recieved numerous emails on this same subject, so I hope
it's not too much trouble that I'm pointing out that the quote is from Mystery
Science Theater 3000; specifically, from Episode 310, featuring the movie
Fugitive Alien. There's a scene where one guy (Rocky) attempts to squish
another guy (Ken, the titular alien), with a forklift. This fails, there's a
brief chase and fight scene, the music gets bombastic and Joel and the Bots
sing along with, This is the song/written for the train chase/this is the
chase, Rocky and Ken/He tried to kill me with a forklift/Ole!" Apparently,
someone at Maxis was a fan of the show.
This seems to be the case, Mr. Fairfield. Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode
number 310 does indeed feature this line.
Click on the Help menu in the menu bar and select "About SimCity 2000..." for
an interesting read.
In the DOS version, select "About" under "File" in the menu bar. Those who have
both versions will notice there are slight variations (there are also
variations between the Win95 and Win3.1 versions as well).
If you're wondering about that "Spooty Struct," info on that can be found in
Section 8 (L N K).
=======================================================
Section 6.1: Starting And Designing Your City SRT
=======================================================
There are many ways to go about designing your city. You could flatten the
terrain and go for an efficient, Borg-style plan that maximizes the return on
all available resources. Social services are minimal, and the Sims are regarded
as simply more mouths to feed. Emphasis is placed on simply squeezing as many
people as you can into the same small space, then squeezing as much money as
you can out of those Sims. Alternatively, you could build your city in a
mountainous setting with waterways flowing, trees growing, and Sims
glowing...with happiness! Here, you take care to make sure plenty of
recreational opportunities are provided. Also, we place a strong emphasis on
providing the best services for your Sims; plenty of health care, police, and
fire protection. Population isn't even a concern here, it's just a statistic.
You spend almost all your money making Sims happy, and are barely operating in
the black.
And of course, there are dozens of in-betweens I could discuss at length as
well, but just know that there are other options.
6.1.1 Starting the City:
==========================
Editing the Terrain:
--------------------
Starting a city is simple enough. You either choose to start a new city with a
randomly-generated terrain, or you edit the terrain to your liking before
starting it.
The first option usually works out fairly well. You're not likely to be given a
terrain that is impossible to develop, and each terrain generated by the
terrain editor has its own unique quirks. See if you can't take advantage of
some of the unique landscape features that appear in the terrain. Random
terrains are also well-suited for beginners because they generally expose you
several of the terrains that appear in SC2K. You'll find coasts, rivers,
mountains, valleys, plains, forests, etc. The beginning SC2K mayor can become
accustomed to these terrain features and learn how to use them best
accordingly.
If you decide, instead, to design and create a terrain of your own, there are
some things you want to keep in mind. First of all, it's unwise to create
terrains that have maxed out water sliders and minimized mountain sliders.
You'll just end up with entirely flooded terrains that are un-developable
unless you lower the sea level. If you're attempting to build a megalopolis
with a skyrocketing population, you probably want to design your terrain such
that all the necessary geographic features are there (i.e. a place for seaports
and water pumps). Otherwise, shape your terrain in a manner you think will be
best for your city and your personal tastes. You can create all sorts of
terrain styles; a ring of land (atoll), geometric shapes, archipelagos or other
odd-ball landscapes.
Time and Money:
---------------
When you're finally ready to actually found your city, you'll be presented with
an opportunity to choose a name for your city, the year it will be founded, and
the amount of money you'll start with. If you start in the year 1900, you'll
only have limited technological resources available to you. As your city grows
and time passes on, you'll need to update certain aspects of your city, like
power plants, transportation systems, etc. If you start out in 2050, you'll
have most all of the technology available to you. You can start building a
completely pre-planned city with all the amenities right from the get-go.
When it comes to money, this choice is merely a matter of how difficult you
want your mayoral experience to be. Starting with $20,000 is, of course, the
easiest route. You'll have almost no problem at all building any kind of city
from the ground up with this select. If you instead opt for $10,000 or the
bond, be prepared for some rough times ahead. Be particularly careful with the
bond, because its interest payments will soon eat up a small city. You'll want
to develop the city as quickly as possible so you can muster the financial
strength to pay the bond off.
Where to build the city:
------------------------
Now that you've started the city in your new terrain, it's time to decide where
you want to first start constructing your city. My recommendation is that you
start construction in a corner, preferably a corner with a nearby water source
that allows shipping. Starting in the corner makes it easier for you to see
where you want your city to go in the future. Also, it makes it easier to build
any connections to your neighbors without costly lengths of road or rail.
When it comes to actually starting the city, try these steps:
- Build your power plant a good distance away from where you want to lay the
first sections of road. This will keep the plant's pollution away from your
Sims. Also, be sure NOT to build the plant near your water source, as it
will pollute the water, which in turns lowers the life expectancy of your
city's inhabitants. Besides, power lines are cheap enough, it shouldn't bug
you too much to keep the plant at a distance.
- When it comes to proper proportioning of your zones, I recommend that 50% of
your zones be residential, with 25% as industry and 25% as commercial. As
time goes on, you'll want to even those out to 33% apiece, with slightly
emphasis on industrial and residential. When your city has reached a very
large size, at least 90,000, you should begin placing more influence on
commercial as opposed to industrial.
- Start your water supply small, and add to it as needed. There's no need to
build a huge waterworks that can supply a bustling metropolis if all you've
got is a one-horse-town. Besides, there's no harm in starting out too small
with the water, then adding to it later as needed.
Keep those things in mind, and you should have no difficulty building a
successful city.
Other methods:
--------------
One of the popular techniques in SC2K is the concept of the "chia-city." True
to their name, these cities are completely pre-built with all the necessary
utilities and services. Transportation, power, water, public services, etc. are
all pre-constructed. The land is already zoned and all that needs to happen is
for you to start the game. If the layout was well-designed, your city will turn
out quite nicely. There may be periods of spotty growth, as you probably laid
the city out in a manner that best fits a large metropolis. When a city is
still growing, the layout isn't quite compatible. I wouldn't worry, the city
will survive nonetheless.
Arcology Cities:
----------------
Another viable method of creating a city is to compose almost entirely of
arcologies. There are many reasons one might choose to do this, the chief one
probably being that of obtaining the most populated city possible. Another
motivator for creating a city like this is that one of the easter eggs
available involves building several hundred arcologies.
A city such as this has an entirely different set of problems from a normal
city. Transportation, zone balancing, and city layout become totally irrelevant
and issues like pollution and crime become the two primary concerns.
As far as crime goes, your skyrocketing population is going to send crime
through the roof unless you place a police station for every 2-3 arcologies
that you build. No, I'm not kidding it. You're going to need that kind of
police force in order to keep the crime rate at a reasonable level.
Pollution, on the other hand, will be mostly curbed by the presence of parks,
lots of them. You will want to build a large park for every 2-3 arcologies you
build. Inevitably you will end up with lots of little empty plots of land, so
go ahead and fill those up with small parks.
Transportation is a simple issue for cities such as these. All you need to do
is make sure each arcology has a road running by it. Power and water can be
taken care of in the normal fashion.
You may wish to build an airport and seaport to take care of industrial and
commercial needs, and also remember to build connections to your neighboring
cities.
The end result is a city that's really not much to look at. It looks the same
in one spot as it does in all others, and it really doesn't do much of anything
except generate crime, pollution and money (that you can spend on filling your
mayor's house with crap as a metaphor for filling the emptiness in your cold
heart).
6.1.2 Transportation for Small Cities:
========================================
One of the most important aspects to consider is how you develop your
transportation system. There are many ways to go about it, and it'd behoove you
to consider an option that best serves YOUR city.
For small cities built entirely within a natural terrain, it's best to use the
branch method, as I will describe with water systems (scroll down to section
6.2.3 to see it anyway). You won't need any highways, subways, or probably even
any railways. You can build bus stations if you'd like, but traffic isn't
likely to be an issue with the low population. When developing land on hills,
build your roads so that they go up and down the hill, not along with the crest
of the hill. This is the best utilization of build-able space. Otherwise, try
to be as sparse with your roads as possible. Since you aren't too concerned in
this situation will developing every possible tile, don't try too hard to ruin
a beautiful setting with lots of roadwork just to reach an out-of-the-way tile.
Try to avoid building grids on hills and mountains because it's simply
impractical and it's also not very aesthetic. Instead, build meandering roads
with small pieces of property here and there. You know, like a REAL country
road would be.
6.1.3 Transportation for Big Cities:
======================================
There are lots of options to consider when building a large city, mostly
concerning the layout of your roads. However, you also want to consider how to
implement subways and railways effectively; you'll need these systems to avoid
serious traffic problems (I'll discuss these after dealing with roads).
One of the biggest questions here is how exactly to lay out the roads. There
are many methods; some good, others...not so great.
---Note---
For the following:
R = One tile of road
( ) = Land (In other words, a blank space is a tile of land)
3x3 Grid:
---------
This is easily the most road-heavy layout there is, without simply entering
into the realm of absurdity.
R R
R R
R R R R R R R R R
R R
R R
R R
R R R R R R R R R
R R
R R
The advantage is the huge reduction in traffic and any zone deterioration that
would result from it. Unfortunately, this is more than offset by the fact that
nearly 50% of your land is used up by roads. Also, you cannot fit anything
larger than 3x3 into one of those blocks, forcing you adjust accordingly. A
better method would be removing several of the roads in one direction. This
leaves you with rows of roads separated by three titles, with the occasional
cross-street to provide access among the roads. However, you still end wasting
a lot of space, not to mention creating traffic problems. End result? You have
a poorly-designed road system that ought not to be used. I include it only
because I seem to see it in a lot of cities (i.e. the Chicago scenario).
4x4 Grid:
---------
R R
R R
R R R R R R R R R R
R R
R R
R R
R R
R R R R R R R R R R
R R
R R
A more practical variation of the method above, this design still uses almost
40% of your real estate. Traffic can become a problem here, and you'll want to
begin implementing subways, buses, and highways. Also, you'll be able to fit
any building into one of these blocks. Once again, a better method would be to
prune down the cross streets.
6x6 Grid:
---------
R R
R R
R R R R R R R R R R R R
R R
R R
R R
R R
R R
R R
R R R R R R R R R R R R
R R
R R
This is the most efficient implementation of a standard square grid in SC2K.
This time, you're only using 28% of your land for roads. Moreover, these
squares are as big as they can get without leaving empty spaces in the middle,
where no zones would develop. As with the other two, it would be even more
efficient to prune some cross-streets. Also, you'll face serious traffic issues
if you don't construct alternative forms of transportation.
9x9 Grid:
---------
U = Un-developable land.
R R
R R
R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R
R R
R R
R R
R U U U R
R U U U R
R U U U R
R R
R R
R R
R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R
R R
R R
Unlike the previous grid patterns, it would not serve to your benefit to prune
the cross-streets. You're already building a grid that's too big, but here's
the upside: The middle portion is used for civic and public structures like
schools, police stations, and parks. Traffic will become an issue, so you'll
have to deal with that. Building highways can be kind of awkward too. Also,
since you're committed to this pattern, it becomes annoying thinking that
you're obligated to construct what may seem to you to be too many public
building on your part. If that gets you down, just try to think about all the
Sims that you're benefiting with this.
6x13 Patterns:
--------------
R R R R
R R R R
R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R
R R R R
R R R R
R R R R
R R R R
R R R R
R R R R
R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R
R R R R
R R R R
R R R R
R R R R
R R R R
R R R R
R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R
R R R R
R R R R
This particular pattern of the 6x13 blocks is only one variation of the
possibilities out there. You can also pattern them like bricks, in a herring
bone pattern, or as simply stacked upon on another. I like this design,
however, both because of its aesthetic value, and because of the way it sort of
has major and minor roads. The major roads are in 13x13 blocks, and span as
long as the city itself. Meanwhile, there are shorter roads within the large
blocks that serve to provide access. I feel this replicates real-life cities
more realistically, since they are built like that, with major and minor
thoroughfares.
You can also arrange the 6x13 blocks with 6x6 blocks to create huge patterns
that are both aesthetic and practical.
R R
R R
R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R
R R R
R R R
R R R
R R R
R R R
R R R
R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R
R R R R
R R R R
R R R R
R R R R
R R R R
R R R R
R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R
R R R
R R R
R R R
R R R
R R R
R R R
R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R
R R
R R
This is a very efficient use of roads here, which means lots of traffic issues.
Make sure to build viable and complete subways and highways to keep traffic at
bay.
Other Patterns:
---------------
There are other variations on what I've already shown. The most popular of
those would be the spiral, one of the most efficient uses of roads there are.
Basically, you just build a spiraling roadway with even spacing to end up with
a giant spiral. The problem here is that it's not realistic. No real city would
survive if people were forced to drive who knows how many miles just to go
somewhere only a short distance away because it's on a different loop of the
spiral. Another issue is traffic, so deal with it accordingly.
(...) R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R R R R R R R R R R R R R R
R R R
R R R
R R R
R R R
R R R
R R R
R R R R R R R R R R R
R R
R R
R R
R R
R R
R R
R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R
Another popular pattern is simply to build one road after another, space 6
tiles apart, with no connection in between. This is simply the most efficient
use of roads available, albeit highly unrealistic looking. Imagine having to
literally travel to another city just to get one block over. Also, you're going
to have serious traffic issues to wrestle with. But hey, how can you say no to
a land-use of 14%?
(...)R R R R R R R R R R R R R R(...)
(...)R R R R R R R R R R R R R R(...)
(...)R R R R R R R R R R R R R R(...)
6.1.4 Other Transportation Methods:
=====================================
It is wholly possible to build your city without a single tile of road. Albeit
expensive, it still looks neat.
One of the important things to remember is how zones will develop around
stations. This way, you can use a efficient pattern in order to lay them out
without building too many stations, or having blank plots of land.
Keep in mind that it's VERY EXPENSIVE to implement these systems.
D = Border of developable land
S = Subway or rail station
R = Railway
Subway station:
D
D D D
D D D D D
D D D S D D D
D D D D D
D D D
D
Subway station pattern:
S D S D S
D D D D
D D D D
D S D S D
D D D D
D D D D
S D S D S
Obviously, there is some overlap, but this is the only consistent pattern that
will result in no empty spaces. It's a rather space-efficient method, if I do
say so myself. Also, if you consider the suggestion from IcthyoidMecha (do a
Ctrl+F for that name to see for yourself) then a transportation system composed
entirely of subways might be lucrative to you.
Rail station:
D D
D D D D
D D D D D D
D D D S S D D D
D D D S S D D D
D D D D D D
D D D D
D D
Rail station pattern:
S D D S S D D S
D D D D
D D D D
R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R
D S S D D S S D
D S S D D S S D
D D D D
D D D D
R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R
S D D S S D D S
The big problem with making an entirely rail-dependent city is the amount of
land it takes for all those 2x2 stations and the track that goes with it. In
the end, there are simply no non-aesthetic reasons to go with a rail-dependent
city.
============================================
Section 6.2: Maintaining Your City MTN
============================================
These are all the things you need to keep your eye on as an SC2K mayor in order
to ensure that your city is in top-notch shape.
6.2.1 Dealing with traffic:
=============================
Each form of transportation has a capacity limit. But Sims need transportation
to move from one zone to another. If you exceed the limit, traffic jams can
form, lowering the capacity. If this happens all the time, the affected zones
will begin to deteriorate. Try to avoid this by having a complete intermodal
transportation system. Don't go overboard, though. If you do, you'll be making
it hard on yourself by taking potentially developable land and wasting it on
unnecessary transportation (not to mention all the money you'll be wasting by
spending it all on maintenance). Make sure to always keep the transit authority
fully-funded, and try to exercise good design when it comes to laying out your
roads (as previously discussed).
Highways:
---------
When it comes to highways, there are several routes to take.
- SPIDERWEB METHOD: In this case, which is better suited for larger
cities with a major downtown center, you'll basically have one highway
intersection in the middle of your city, with all the highways radiating
outward from that one point. Try not to build more than 5 or 6 highways,
though. More than that is somewhat excessive. Build about 4, with one
highway going towards an edge of the map, connecting you to you're your
neighbors via highway.
Additionally, if you have fewer highways, you can build a single length of
highway circling the center of your city. This is common in many large
cities in the Eastern US.
- HIGHWAY GRID: The method here is not unlike building roads.
Except in this case, you're building a grid of highways. Quite prominent in
Los Angeles, it's fairly simple to build a light grid of highways, perhaps 2
running in each direction. You'll end up with a square in the middle
surround by 8 partial squares. This results in roughly the same affect as
the method above, but is a little more rigid.
- HIGHWAY SPUR: This method works best for moderately sized cities, and
is also probably the most realistic in terms of having a city with nowhere
else to go. Basically, you build one highway running across the city from
neighbor to neighbor, with a cross-highway intersecting it. This other
highway does not quite stretch from neighbor to neighbor, and it also turns
accordingly wherever it might best be used.
- DOWNTOWN HIGHWAY: This is best suited for cities that may very well not
deserve a highway. What you do is take a pre-existing main thoroughfare
through your city and turn it into a highway that runs the length of the
populated area of your city. As your city grows you may choose to increase
the length of this highway.
Railroads:
----------
For railroads, you can pursue a couple of courses of action. One is to build a
very light grid (about four lines in all, perhaps) to serve your city.
Alternatively, you can build a single line that either runs straight through
your city or meanders through it to provide rail access to many parts of the
city. The most important function of railways, though, is to provide a means of
neighbor connections for industry. Other than that, just make sure to build
train stations in all your zones to keep it functional.
Subways:
--------
The great convenience with subways is the small amount of above-ground real
estate the systems take up. Unfortunately, SC2K lacks the complexity for main
subway terminals with small stations surrounding it. My preferred method is
sort of a combo loop-branch deal. I build a single line that meanders
throughout much of the city, without too many out-of-the-way detours, so that I
end up with a single loop. Then I add short branches where necessary in order
to get a roughly even coverage of the city. You might find it easier to build
your stations where you feel they are necessary first, then add the subway
lines. Then it's basically like connect-the-dots.
Bus Stations:
-------------
Bus Stations have a HUGE affect on the road traffic. What I usually end up
doing with them is placing them at particularly busy intersections. Sims must
get on the bus at the station, but they can disembark anywhere. So if you do
what I described, you should end up with a light peppering of stations
throughout your city, each one serving its local propinquity.
6.2.2 Dealing with power:
===========================
Power Plants:
-------------
Your cities will need power, no matter what. It is simply impossible to develop
a city in SC2K without a power source. Solution? Build a power plant.
But maybe it's not so simple after all.
All the power plants have their pro and cons. You always want to make sure that
the new plant is going to satisfy your Sims' demands. Also, you want to make
sure you can actually afford the new plant, and that its little drawbacks fit
within your tolerances.
As your city grows larger, you'll want to update coal and oil plants with newer
microwave and fusion plants or else they become insubstantial. Gas and solar
will always be little more than novelties for big cities, and nuclear is simply
a loose cannon. You'll find that if you try to keep your very large cities
powered with coal and oil, not are you taking up valuable real estate with 10
or so plants, but 10 or so such plants produce a LOT of pollution. You're also
paying more to replace 10 of these than you are to replace a single microwave
plant, which doesn't pollute.
Consult the Graph Window to make sure you have plenty of power. If the Map
Window still shows areas that are red, then make sure everything is connected
properly.
The Power Grid:
---------------
When building your city, try to make sure that your power grid is well-built
and that parts of it are not at the mercy of a single power line (wherever
possible, obviously). This is particularly true for large, flat cities with
nothing but a grid of roads. Ideally, each city block should be connected to
four other city blocks. This way, if you ever have to do work on a few blocks,
you don't have to worry about cutting off power to half your city accidentally
(I know, you probably paused the game, but it's easy to forget).
6.2.3 Dealing with water:
===========================
I've heard a lot of different things about water. Some claim water has no
effect on the city. Not true. Some claim you can build a "phantom" water pump
that provides all the water your city needs, without even being near a water
source, or being connected to your city at all! This is merely a bug that fools
the simulator into thinking that your city has water.
I did some research and found that most of the experiments done with this sort
of thing found that land value is the only thing affected by water. One such
experiment shows that population is also affected. I don't know what to make of
this.
Water Source:
-------------
If you want to provide your city with water, then go about as you would for
power.
Construct large numbers of water pumps along fresh-water shores, or dedicate
tracts of land for water pumps. Here, you can place ponds in certain patterns
for maximum pump usage. When it comes to actually laying out your pumps, it
depends on the circumstances. If you have a large tract of land devoted to
pumps, it's simply more efficient to cover the entire thing with pumps. This
will produce the most water as opposed to other configurations that have ponds.
If your city is built in a more natural setting, than you will want to utilize
available water to the best of your ability.
Examples:
W = Water
P = Pump
W W W W W W W W W
W P W P W P W P W
W W W W W W W W W
or...
W W W W W W W W W
P P P P P P P P P
W W W W W W W W W
or...
P P P P P P P P P
P W P W P W P W P
P P P P P P P P P
In the first example, you'll have to build power lines in the water, which may
look funny, but works nonetheless.
If your water supply tends to fluctuate wildly (huge surpluses some of the
time, massive droughts in between), then construct water towers to even out the
supply. Water towers store water surplus, then dispense it when there is a
shortage.
It's always good to build at least one water-treatment plant. Also, you don't
need to make sure that all water passes through the plant before it reaches
your Sims. Just make sure it's connected to the water system.
Water System:
-------------
Water systems are probably one of the most difficult things to maintain in the
game. Demolished buildings leave their old plumbing behind and it can be
difficult at times to discern where a possible broken connection is, due to the
nature of how water is doled out in SC2K.
Basically, all the water produced is dispersed through some center point in
your city, then it expands outward in a diamond shape until the capacity has
been reached. Generally, this diamond should be larger than your city, such
that everything is receiving an adequate supply. Even if you build a pump
directly next to an un-watered building, it is still dispersed through the
center of your city.
When it comes to laying out the pipes, there are two methods.
- GRID METHOD: This is basically like laying out power lines. You lay out a
grid of water pipes so that every city block is watered. However, it's
generally wiser to lay out your pipes in only one direction as opposed to
both directions like a real grid would be. Also, since water pipes can be
built under roads, you can lay them out such that each pipe waters two rows
of blocks, which is far more cost-effective. I know this seems like the
opposite of what I said about power lines, but since water systems are not
prone to being accidentally deleted, and since temporary loss of water is
not nearly as critical as loss of power, I feel it's safe enough to apply
this technique.
This method is best suited for large, flat cities with acres of grid-like
city blocks.
- TREE METHOD: This technique is better for cities that are built among
mountains and valleys. In these instances, it's usually impractical to have
your entire city drinking from a single water supply. Also, you probably
don't have the space available for building huge water pumping grounds from
which the entire city is watered. You'll generally have one or more smaller
watering areas that each water a small part of the nearby city. Basically
you build a main line from the water source to the section of city (the
trunk) then build smaller lines that branch off of the main into the rest of
the city section, so that all of it is watered. Each water source will have
its own main line, each feeding into a different part of the city.
The Graph window displays the percentage of water not being used by your Sims.
The simulator uses this information to determine the state of the water supply.
Phantom water pumps are discussed in section 7.1 (T R K).
6.2.4 Dealing with education:
===============================
Education influences a lot of things in your city. As such, it's important to
make sure to keep your Sims book smart. Build schools and colleges for the
growing Sims. These are the buildings that will actually serve to increase
education as your Sims grow. Make sure to build enough so that their capacity
isn't breached.
Build museums and libraries for your adult Sims. These buildings will help
prevent the decay of EQ over time. Since your work force is primarily made up
of adults, these buildings can also help ensure that high-tech industry
develops in your city. This in turn will reduce pollution. A happier and
healthier SimCity for all.
The grades of schools and colleges are determined by the student-teacher ratio.
The closer this ratio is to 1:1, the better the grade will be. Use the query
information you get from schools and colleges to make sure that you have built
enough to serve the entire population.
6.2.5 Dealing with health:
============================
When it comes to health, the only building you have to worry about providing is
the hospital. Hospitals operate on a capacity method, as opposed to the area of
effect that police and fire stations use. Depending on your computer, hospitals
will either have 600 or 1000 beds. The grades of your hospitals are determined
by the patient-doctor ratio. The closer this ratio is to 1:1, the better your
hospitals' grades will be.
6.2.6 Dealing with land value:
================================
Land value is determined by a multitude of factor (Water supply, crime,
pollution, etc.). To have a good land value, try to make sure your Sims have
the following:
- Adequate power and water.
- Adequate police and fire coverage.
- Enough hospitals.
- Enough education facilities.
- Lots of recreation facilities.
- Low pollution levels.
- Lots of landscaping (i.e. water, hills, trees).
- Low traffic.
As you can see, the land value is sort of a culmination of all your efforts as
a mayor. If you have a really high land value, this is a sign that you've
constructed an overall good city.
High land values should be well above 270 or so. $256,000 is the highest land
value a queried tile can have. See if you can get a dense industrial tile to
have that kind of land value.
6.2.7 Dealing with crime:
===========================
Crime is basically the absence of police protection. Crime lowers land value
and it can incite riots. To keep this negative aspect of city life at bay, make
sure you have plenty of police stations evenly distributed across the map.
Each police station has a radius of effect. You can use this to your advantage
by patterning them out so that your entire city is fully protected by the
police. Try to avoid building police stations on the edge of the map. This will
reduce their effectiveness without reducing the cost. A good way to deal with
high crime is to open the Map Window and check out the crime rate there. That
way, you can build police stations right in the middle of the problem area,
nullifying the local crime.
As the population gets denser, the crime will become more difficult to deal
with, particularly when there are lots of arcologies present. Make sure to stay
on top of it by building a police station next to ALL your arcologies.
There was a time when I though that neighbor connections were useless. Then I
got the ominous "Industry needs connections" message and I learned otherwise.
It turns out that building highway and rail connections provide a boost for
industry and building road connections helps Commerce. I've learned that the
simulator is set so that you want to develop your industrial sector before you
really get in with the commerce. As time goes on, the importance of Commerce
will soon take precedence over your industry.
=============================================
Section 6.3: Dealing With Scenarios SCS
=============================================
There are a few different kinds of scenarios. Some of them have high crime,
high unemployment, or low populations. Most of them actually have physical
disasters with which you must contend (hurricanes, earthquakes, etc).
Some of these scenarios will have certain conditions which you must obey. (i.e.
no arcologies, etc.) Otherwise, you're pretty much allowed to do whatever you
choose in the time span given you to complete the scenario. What you actually
do will be determined by what you do with the city AFTER the scenario is
completed. You may choose to keep it as a trophy of your success, or toss it
aside and move on to the next one. In the former case, you'll want to make sure
that the city isn't buried in loans, never to resurface. In the latter case,
you really don't care _what_ happens to the city, so long as it'll stay afloat
for the duration of the scenario period.
After you choose a scenario, pay attention to the window that pops up after the
city loads. It will tell you everything you need to know to complete the
scenario successfully. Generally, you'll have to get the population to a
certain amount, maybe even with some money in the bank to go along with it. If
a disaster occurs, you'll have to prioritize them in order of urgency. Fires
always take precedence, so deal with them first. After that, and perhaps along
with fires, take care of any rioters that are about.
When it comes to financing repair costs, the methods depend on the goal. If you
don't want to save the scenario for future play, then take out all the loans
you want. Otherwise, try to make sure you'll be able to bring the city back at
some point in the future.
Here is where you're gonna find stuff that may or may not have anything to do
with the gameplay, and may or may not be considered cheating. It all depends on
what your goals are. If you plan to "succeed" in SC2K through less-than-
scrupulous means then it might be considered cheating. Otherwise, we like to
think of it as "gaining an edge." Also, stuff that can't really be learned is
places here as well.
This is a somewhat complicated process, I'm afraid. According to Maxis, you
should be able to rename the file with a *.SC2 extension, then open it with
SC2K and voila...NOT!
This method does not work as prescribed, at least not for me. Apparently, one
should be able to import cities directly through SCURK as well, but that is not
the case.
There is a method that DOES work, but it requires that you have both SC2K and
SimCity Classic (SCC) installed (which is probably the case anyway, if you've
got *.CTY files lying around the HDD). Here's how you do it.
Open up SCC and select whichever *.CTY file you want. Then open the File Menu
and select "Save City as..."
Simply change the extension from *.CTY to *.SC2. Save the new file, then close
SCC.
Open SC2K and select "Load Saved City." Browse to the directory where you saved
your new *.SC2 file and open it. You initially receive an error. Click "OK" and
then you will be asked if you want to convert this SimCity "1.0" file, select
"Yes."
You should now see your *.CTY file in *.SC2 format! Save a new copy in the
directory where you keep all your *.SC2 files.
---Things to be aware of after conversion---
Unfortunately, your new city will not come with mountains or valleys. It will
be completely flat terrain. All water will be 100 ft deep, except on the edges
of the map. Be sure to make the necessary changes to keep the city viable. In
SCC, it was possible to have rail systems without train stations, while in SC2K
it is not. Make sure to get a water system going too. There will be blank land
surrounding your city because SCC cities are smaller than SC2K cities. Also,
there was a method of "overlapping" zones in SCC to save space. Such overlaps
will appear as brown boxes in SC2K that ought to be deleted.
7.1.2 Turning scenario files into regular files:
==================================================
Maybe you don't feel like taking care of that volcano in order to enjoy
Portland. Is that San Francisco earthquake too much for you? No problem.
Make copies of any scenario files (*.SCN) you want to convert and paste them to
your *.SC2 directory. Simply change the extensions from *.SCN to *.SC2, then
open the file in SC2K. There you have it, all the glory of these great cities,
without the little nuisance of having to save them. =P
7.1.3 "This music sucks!" or...Using your own MIDI files: (Windows only)
===========================================================
I must admit that the music of SC2K is something else. While most people today
would simply turn it off and run Winamp in the background, I know there are
some who would prefer more "interactive" music. In other words, music that
actually responds to what happens in the game. There is a very simple way to
accomplish this small feat.
Go to the directory where you have SC2K installed. Once there, open the
"Sounds" folder ("SOUNDS" in Win3.1). There are two groups of files. MIDI and
wave files. The wave files are the game's sound effects. The MIDI files are the
game's music. Make back-up copies of the MIDI files in another directory (i.e.
"Backup Sounds").
Now you can move your preferred MIDIs into the Sounds directory, and rename
them to replace the existing MIDIs. When all is said and done, start up SC2K
and you'll be hearing your new music.
The above will also work for .WAV files. Just make sure you're making
replacements with the correct file type.
7.1.4 The "Phantom" Water Pump:
=================================
What does the phantom water pump do? It basically tricks the simulator into
thinking your city has a full water supply (although not really, it's just bad
design on the simulator's part).
All you have to do is build a water pump and make sure it's powered. Also make
sure that it's not connected to the water system in any way, shape, or form.
While you will miss out on the benefits of having a real water system, the
phantom pump makes it possible to get the really high populations, without
taking up all that space with water pumps.
7.1.5 The Magic Eraser:
=========================
The Magic Eraser is a neat little trick that lets you build more than one thing
on the same tile! Select the Tree tool then start plopping trees near the stuff
you want to erase. Then, hold down [Shift] and "erase" the desired tiles.
Voila! You can use this trick to make single-lane highways, one tile power
plants, and smaller arcos. Note that with power plants, pollution AND power
production will both be reduced. However, with arcos, the population remains
unchanged.
7.1.6 Viewing the tile coordinates:
=====================================
This is a cool feature that lets you view the X and Y coordinates of any tile!
Simply select the query tool then hold down the [Alt] key when you query a
tile. You will see the X and Y coordinates in the bottom of the query window.
Tiles are numbered 0-127.
7.1.7 Un-sticking those stuck trains:
=======================================
Occasionally, while you make your city better and better, you will come upon a
stuck train. Basically, it's just sitting there for no apparent reason. I don't
know why this happens, but it seems to occur more frequently in larger cities,
particularly when near an intersection or rail<-->subway junction.
To remove this hideous eyesore, you will have to delete each section of train
(there are usually three, although sometimes two or more trains can become
stuck to each other). You'll know that the offending train has been removed
when you see (not hear, see) a small explosion.
When that has been taken care of, re-build the destroyed track and any
destroyed roads or power lines. The train will re-appear at a random train
station and move about its business once more.
Don't freak out when you see a stuck train, it happens quite frequently.
7.1.8 Letting the game run unattended:
========================================
Fortunately for you, SC2K does not require your full attention each second it's
running. You can set it so that it will run on its own for as long as your
computer is on.
Make sure you have made the following selections:
- Auto-Budget ON
- Sound Effects OFF
- Music OFF (these two probably make little difference, but we'll do it
anyway)
- No Disasters SELECTED
- Newspaper "Subscription" and "Extra!" both turned OFF
Then, make sure that your city is generating more money than it is costing by a
fair margin. Otherwise when your budget hits the red, Auto-Budget will turn off
and that'll ruin the whole thing. Also, make sure that your city will be able
to afford new power plants every 50 years.
Zoom all the way out, then scroll the sliders all the way to one side (i.e.
top-left, top-right, bottom-left, bottom-right).
Select the highest speed before minimize the City window, then the actual
simulator window.
Let this run for as long as you see fit. This is the method I used to find out
just how long it takes to get rid of that nasty radioactive pollution.
Here is where you'll find all the known cheats that serve to alter the gameplay
to your advantage (most of the time...) in manners that aren't exactly
scrupulous. I've included here as many relevant cheats as I could find,
organized by system. Here you will also find Easter eggs. Enjoy.
7.2.1 The following cheats appear across several platform versions:
=====================================================================
cass: (Mac, DOS, Win3.1, Win95)
-----
This will deposit $250 into your city's coffers. However, if used too
frequently, it will result in a fire storm (only with disasters enabled).
vers: (Mac, DOS)
-----
This will tell you the version number (with a small explanation).
fund: (Mac, DOS, Win3.1, Win95)
-----
A popup will appear asking if you'd like to take out a bond at 25% interest.
Yeah, right. (This cheat is quite handy in the DOS version, to be explained
further below)
porntipsguzzardo: (Mac)
-----------------
or...
buddamus: (Win3.1)
---------
or...
imacheat: (Win95, Pocket PC)
---------
This will give you $500,000 along with all inventions and gifts. =O
joke: (Mac, Win3.1, Win95)
-----
A popup appears with either one of two images, depending on your copy of SC2K.
In some versions, you'll see a poorly-rendered dead fish with an arm and its
tongue sticking out, amidst the following phrase:
"THE PIRATE SQUID CLUB WANTS YOU!"
Refer to Section 8 (L N K) for more info on the Pirate Squid Club.
In other versions, you will see a variation of the SimCity Classic splash
screen in a Win3.1-style window. The title is "SimCity Two Cows In Windows." I
think it's supposed to rhyme with SimCity 2000 Windows, but I'm not sure.
7.2.2 Windows Cheats: (either 3.1 or 95)
=======================
noah:
-----
This cheat will cause a major flood, whether or not disasters are enabled.
moses: (Win95 only)
------
This will stop the aforementioned flood.
gilmartin:
----------
This will prompt the military to request a base in your city, regardless of
population. May or may not actually result in a base being built.
Bases built in this manner tend to glitch, or not develop at all.
priscilla: (oivaismir in Win3.1)
----------
Opens the "Debug" menu. Full description of that is at the end of this section.
mrsoleary: (Win3.1 only)
----------
Starts a firestorm.
7.2.3 DOS Cheats:
===================
heck, damn, or darn:
--------------------
Entering any of these three words will result in a popup saying "Hey! Same to
you buddy!"
Immediately afterward, the "church virus" starts. Literally ALL of your
residential zones will fill up with churches, anywhere they can fit. It really
is something else.
To rid your city of this plague (without losing progress), save it and exit out
of the program. Reload the city and bulldoze all the churches, then rezone the
land as you see fit.
porn: (DOS 1.0 only)
-----
If you have a sound card, you will hear the phrase "I can't get enough."
Version 1.1 for DOS does not have this.
memy:
-----
This will perform a memory check. Also, it will display whether or not SFX and
music are enabled.
test:
-----
Displays a popup that will say something like "TEST 1.10BH 10 - 12 - 94."
That's it.
torg: (DOS 1.1 only)
-----
Type this in and you will see the following popup:
"Congratulations! You have found
the special Grot Box feature!
- Chris 'What is this spooty thing?' B."
After this, you will receive $500,000 and all rewards (sans mil. base). Typing
it again will merely result in another $500,000.
7.2.4 Macintosh Cheats: (v1.1 only)
=========================
Open the Map window and click inside of it. Type "pirn," then click inside the
Status window. Afterwards, type in "topsguzzardo."
What this does is identical to "porntipsguzzardo" in the Macintosh 1.0 version.
7.2.5 PlayStation Cheats:
===========================
0% Interest on Bonds:
---------------------
Open the Budget Window and hold down the Triangle button, then enter the
following combo:
L1, L2, L1, L2, R2, R1, R2, R1
This will give you 0% interest on bonds. Be careful, however. It may result in
a $100,000 fine.
$1,000,000:
-----------
Open the Budget Window and perform the following:
Hold down the R1 button and press X, Circle, Triangle, Square.
Hold down the L1 button and press X, Circle, Triangle, Square.
Hold down the R2 button and press X, Circle, Triangle, Square.
Hold down the L2 button and press X, Circle, Triangle, Square.
Do this correctly and you will have $1,000,000!
Maximum dispatch allowed:
-------------------------
Select the dispatch tool then cancel it. Mouse over the status bar (the
scrolling bar at the top of the screen) and enter the following combo:
Left, Right, Left, Right, Circle, X
This will allow you dispatch the maximum amount of police, firemen, and
military allowed in the game, regardless of how many stations you have.
No-cost for using most tools:
-----------------------------
Select the Tree tool then cancel it Mouse over the status bar and enter the
following combo:
Up, Down, Right, Left, Up, X
This will make most tools in the game free of charge!
Reset the game:
---------------
Hold down the following sequence and the game will reset:
L2 + L1 + R2 + R1 + Start + Select
All unsaved data WILL be lost.
---The following codes will only work in 3D mode---
When done correctly, all the streets in your city will be covered with gold
nuggets. A timer appears counting the seconds down. Collect as many nuggets as
you can before the time runs out. Have fun.
Buried treasure:
----------------
Now, you may be skeptical about this one because I haven't seen it mentioned
anywhere online. In fact, it's only happened to me once.
Build a city like you normally would, make sure there is a coast (a river might
work, but I'm not sure).
When you've built your city as best as you can, just let it run. That's all I
can tell you. If you're REALLY lucky, you'll get a popup saying that
archeologists have found a treasure map.
Open the Map Window and take a look at this new map. You'll see a compass rose,
and a red X. Go to this spot in your city and use the lower terrain tool
(you'll probably lose some buildings, but oh well).
You will find buried treasure. I kid you not. This treasure (which apparently
consists of gold-plated pantaloons, if I remember correctly) will be auctioned
off, and the money raised will be given to you (your current funds are
doubled).
I know it sounds messed up, but it IS true. Trust me on this one.
7.2.6 Saturn Cheats:
======================
Infinite money:
---------------
Pause the game and enter the following combo:
A, Z, X, Y
You will now have infinite money. Yay.
The slot machine:
-----------------
Construct a marina and hook it up with power and water. Open the Budget Window
and enact the Legalized Gambling ordinance. Mouse over the resulting sailboat
(make sure the sailboat tile is highlighted) and press L. A slot machine
appears 1/4 of the time.
To use the slot machine you must pay $10. Also, the slot machine will behave
differently depending on whether or not you have disasters enabled. If
disasters are enabled, lots of different things might happen. Otherwise, only a
few different things may occur. Good luck with this thing, you'll need it.
7.2.7 Nintendo 64 Cheats:
===========================
Extra map with $5,000,000:
--------------------------
When you're at the main screen, enter the following combo:
7.3.1 The Bull Moose: (DOS only)
=======================
You already know what happens when you bulldoze a lot of trees in SC2K. Keep
doing it, however, and you'll receive a popup stating the following:
"Citizens are protesting your destruction of the forest, which is the native
home of the Bull Moose.
"Would you like to hear the call of the Bull Moose?"
Click "YES" and you will hear the Bull Moose, which is a unique sound. I
imagine it's not unlike the sound of a real bull moose, but I do not know what
a bull moose sounds like so I cannot say.
7.3.2 Nessie:
===============
Nessie is the sea monster that appears near your city's marinas. She doesn't
drop by very often but if you're fast you'll catch a glimpse of her. She only
appears when you have marinas, and makes a sound like a lion. If you're antsy
to see her, simply build as many marinas as you care to and be ready to pause
the game as soon as you hear the sound. You'll see that Nessie is green and not
unlike the famous Loch Ness Monster.
7.3.3 Captain Hero:
=====================
Sometimes called Super Sim or Maxis Man (although his creator, Fred Haslam,
called him Captain Hero), this little fellow will occasionally show up when a
disaster occurs, whereupon he valiantly fights it off (and he *always*
succeeds, we just love the little guy, don't we?). He'll show up for almost any
kind of disaster except fires. He will not show up if you've constructed a
military base, or if you haven't been asked to construct a military base. If
you accepted a military base but one was not built anyway, he'll show up.
===============================
Section 7.4: The Debug Menu
===============================
This is what the various functions in the Debug Menu do. This menu will remain
open so long as you keep SC2K open, regardless of what city you opened it in.
The Debug Menu will appear in the menu bar like any of the other menus. When
you click on it, you will have to go through a useless branch titled "Debug >"
for reasons unknown to me.
Show Version Info...:
---------------------
Brings up a popup that tells you the version info.
More Money:
-----------
Adds $500,000 to your account. w00t!
Add All Gifts:
--------------
Makes all population gifts AND inventions available to you, regardless of
population and/or date.
Add All Inventions:
-------------------
Brings up SimCity 2000 Help. Must be some kind of glitch.
The following seven options are all disasters. Go to Section 5 (D S S) for more
information.
Graph Kludge:
-------------
I have no clue what this does. I've tried it with all the various windows open
to see if it fudges up the data, but I can't tell any difference.
===============================
Section 7.5: The Fund Trick
===============================
Even though this a glitch and not a real cheat, I put it here so that it's
within the context of what the "fund" cheat does.
This trick only works in DOS, but it's insanely useful.
Go about starting a city as you normally would. It could either be in the
Terrain Editor or simply starting a new city with a randomized terrain.
Before doing ANYTHING, type in "fund" and accept the bond. Type it in again and
accept a second bond.
Open up the Budget Window and then open the books on bonds. Issue a third bond.
Pay off the first two bonds. If you go back to the Budget Window, you will see
that you're now collecting negative interest on the bond you still have (which
means the bank is PAYING you to keep the bond). This will net you approximately
$1.5 million a year, which should take care of any possible money woes.
This font of wealth will eventually dry up because of a simulator-imposed money
limit. When that happens, simply pay back the bond.
==============================================
Section 7.6: The "Floating Mountain" Trick
==============================================
I could not begin to describe this glitch in any sensible manner, so I'll leave
the work up to this webpage:
This step-by-step walkthrough will tell you everything you need to know about
this interesting terrain glitch. There are even a couple of downloadable
cities; one with figures to go along with the walkthrough, and another that
shows just how crazy you can get with this glitch. Enjoy.
---Note (about this page)---
This is a recovered archive of a webpage that is no longer available online.
I'm currently hosting it on webspace I have with Charter Communications, and I
will try to keep it up as long as I can.
COMMENTS: This site has been around for several years now, and I feel that it's
of top-notch quality. I've downloaded several files from it without fail. I
should also mention that the SCURK section is very useful, probably the most
useful on the Internet right now. The fact that these guys also have SimCity
3000 and SimCity 4 pages should also show that they take themselves seriously.
SimCity 2000 Center:
--------------------
COMMENTS: A rather recent addition to the plethora of SC2K webpages out there,
this site has all the basics. You can't really learn a whole lot, but it's
certainly enough to get you started.
COMMENTS: Not a whole lot here. What makes this site stand out though is that
it has stuff none of these other sites have. Not the least of which is...
The SC2K FAQ! This isn't just any FAQ; this is THE original SC2K FAQ, with
input from the actual game developers. Heck, it's still has the original FAQ
format...the entire thing is written in questions and answers! I must warn you,
though...parts of it are a little out of date, and other parts are just plain
wrong. Oh well. This is a historical document you're looking at, though.
ClubOpolis:
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COMMENTS: What can I say about Clubopolis...for a site that hasn't been updated
for almost a decade now, it's still alive. This site has more CONTENT than any
of the other sites I listed. There are over 850 cities available for download.
You'll find just about everything I talked about in this FAQ at that website.
This is the site where you can learn about the Spooty Struct, the Pirate Squid
Club, and lots of other useless SC2K info.
I keep wondering when the site is going to kick the bucket, but we'll see.
Simcity 2000 Castle:
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COMMENTS: This site has been around for some time, and it's actually how I
first came to know of the "floating mountain" glitch (see link below for
complete info). Here you'll find tips, tricks, cheats, cities, scenarios,
various FAQs (even specialty ones that explain how to make your own scenarios).
SimCity 2000 FTP Server:
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COMMENTS: Available here are several patches released by Maxis for the game, in
addition to a huge assortment of SC2K cities available for download. I'm unsure
as to why Electronic Arts continues to maintain this server but for the time
being it is up, and so I suggest you partake of it while you still can.
SimCity:
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COMMENTS: Maxis may not care for SC2K anymore, and this website is as close as
you can get to an official SC2K website. If you check out their history of the
game, you'll actually here the SC2K theme music playing, as per your browser
settings.
COMMENTS: What you'll mostly find here is a LIST of books that can help you
out. I say list because I've only read one of them, so I can't comment on the
others. Because of this, I will also post this page from the Clubopolis site,
run by Patrick Coston.
"SimCity 2000 - Power, Politics, and Planning" - Nick Dargahi & Michael Bremer:
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At around 450 pages, this guide includes every nook and cranny of SC2K.
Additionally, it has in-depth walkthroughs for each scenario, along with entire
sections devoted to spotlight cities and interviews with the game's developers.
To be quite frank, there's literally nothing that goes uncovered.
The SimCity 2000 Manual - Michael Bremer:
-----------------------------------------
As far as manuals go, this one tops them all. Along with thoroughly explaining
every little detail, it even goes so far to have an entire section filled with
city-related art! I'm talking paintings, poems, essays. The whole manual is
interspersed with relevant quotes as well.
This document may not be reproduced under any circumstances except for
personal, private use. It may not be placed on any web sites other than the
following:
...or otherwise distributed publicly without advance written permission. Use of
this document on any other web site or as a part of any public display is
strictly prohibited, and a violation of copyright.
All trademarks and copyrights contained in this document are owned by their
respective trademark and copyright holders.
The ASCII title of this document, representing the SimCity 2000 logo, is a
creation of Masamune3 from the GameFAQs message board. Thank you for your
contribution.
All other poorly-rendered ASCII graphic representations (not the things they
represent) are copyrighted to Benjermin Ochsner.
10/28/2006 - Version 2.02
- Update the Online Resources section.
- Added material about arcology cities.
- Added suggestion from alert reader.
- Various minor corrections.
03/25/2005 - Version 2.01
- Added really nifty ASCII title.
- Redid tables. (for better or worse, I guess)
- Various minor corrections.
03/10/2005 - Version 2.00
- Revised and expanded throughout:
- Updated the format. Made the ToC easier to read. (I hope...)
- Reorganized the sections.
- Added a section about scenarios.
- Added a whole new section devoted to gameplay strategy.
- Added tidbits throughout the document.
- Other various minor corrections.
11/29/2004 - Version 1.01
- Updated legal section.
11/21/2004 - Version 1.00
- First published version.
I'd like to thank Maxis and Will Wright for creating this great game. Their
product has been the source of countless hours of fun and joy on my part. I
shall always be eternally grateful for their great work. Keep it up.
I'd like to thank Nick Dargahi & Michael Bremer for their book "SimCity 2000 -
Power, Politics, and Planning." I used this book for the hard data in this FAQ
(costs, etc). Mr. Bremer, who is also the writer of the SC2K manual, has set a
standard for game manuals that has not been reached since. I think I speak for
a lot of people when I say that manuals have simply gotten crappier and
crappier over time; heck, strategy guides too. While this FAQ and others may
not have a reason for existing if manuals didn't decline, I for one, mourn this
state of affairs. *gets off of the soapbox*
I'd also like to thank YOU, reader, for taking the time to use this FAQ. I have
thoroughly enjoyed writing this FAQ, and I certainly hope that you thoroughly
enjoyed reading it. It is because of you that FAQs exist in the first place.
And finally, I'd like to thank the following people (reasons described):
Masamune3 - For the most excellent and exquisite ASCII title. Thumbs up!
headbanger - For at least acknowledging the existence of my FAQ.
metallicaeg - Because he insisted that I place his name here.
IcthyiodMecha - For his tip about subways and maintenance costs.
Nicholas Fairfield - For shedding light on the obscure forklift quote.
The fine folks at FC General at GameFAQs.com for their always helpful and
insightful comments.