Tags / city-building

"city-building"

9 BuzzVerdicts across Board Games (8), Mobile Games (1)

Chinatown

4.0

1999 · 3-5 Players · ~60 min · Competitive

Chinatown is pure negotiation distilled into a board game. Every round opens with a frenzy of deal-making where anything can be traded, and the game gives players just enough structure to make those deals meaningful without constraining them. The math behind property values is transparent enough that skilled negotiators can calculate fair trades, but the social dynamics of convincing someone to accept your terms keep every session unpredictable. Component quality is basic, the first couple of rounds can feel slow, and the game needs players who are willing to haggle enthusiastically. When you have the right group, Chinatown creates game night stories that last far longer than its sixty-minute playtime.

Carpe Diem

4.0

2018 · 2-4 Players · ~45-75 min · Competitive

Carpe Diem delivers one of the tightest euro experiences in Stefan Feld's catalog, compressing meaningful decisions into a brisk playtime where every tile draft carries weight and every scoring round demands adaptation. The variable scoring system and randomized tile supply make each game feel different, though the drab visual presentation and harsh penalty system may put off players who prefer gentler point salads. It rewards those who thrive under pressure and enjoy games where efficiency is the whole puzzle.

Suburbia

3.8

2012 · 1-4 Players · ~60-90 min · Competitive

Suburbia turns city building into an economic puzzle where every tile you place affects your income and reputation, creating a SimCity-like experience in board game form. The interaction between adjacent tiles creates chain effects that reward careful planning, and the economic balancing act between income and population growth provides genuine tension. The hidden goals add scoring uncertainty that some players love and others find frustrating, and the tile market randomness can limit strategic options.

Caylus

3.8

2005 · 2-5 Players · ~60-150 min · Competitive

Caylus is one of the foundational worker placement games, and its influence on the genre is impossible to overstate. The Provost mechanism adds a layer of direct interaction and player conflict that many of its descendants have smoothed away, making this a meaner, more confrontational design than most modern euros. It rewards deep strategic thinking and punishes loose play. For experienced gamers who want their worker placement with teeth, Caylus remains essential.

Citadels

3.8

2000 · 2-8 Players · ~30-60 min · Competitive

Citadels is a classic card game that turns role selection into a tense bluffing contest, and it's held up remarkably well for over two decades. The character draft is where the real game lives, and it rewards reading your opponents as much as planning your own moves. Higher player counts introduce downtime that can drag the experience down, and the take-that elements will rub some groups the wrong way. But for four or five players who enjoy getting into each other's heads, Citadels remains one of the most accessible and replayable bluffing games around.

Tiny Towns

3.8

2019 · 1-6 Players · ~45-60 min · Competitive / Pattern Building

Tiny Towns packs a satisfying puzzle into a small box and a short play time, using its resource-calling mechanism to keep every player engaged on every turn. The variable building cards and monument system give it legs across many sessions, and it scales well from solo play to full tables. Limited direct interaction and a visual presentation that lacks personality keep it from standing out in a crowded field of puzzle games. But the core mechanism is clever, the teaching time is minimal, and the puzzle of fitting buildings onto a tiny grid scratches an itch that few other games reach.

Welcome To...

3.7

2018 · 1-100 Players · 25 min · Competitive

Welcome To... takes the roll-and-write concept and replaces dice with cards, giving players identical options each turn while maintaining enough randomness to keep things unpredictable. The simultaneous play eliminates downtime entirely, and the 1950s suburban theme adds charm to what could easily feel like a dry number puzzle. Interaction between players is virtually nonexistent, and the game can feel like a solitary logic exercise dressed up with pleasant artwork. For groups that want a quick, accessible game that scales to almost any player count, Welcome To... delivers a polished experience that holds up well after many plays.

Township

3.5

2013 · Simulation

Township blends farming and city building into a combination that works better than it should, creating a satisfying loop of growing, producing, and expanding. The amount of content available after a decade of updates is staggering, and casual players can spend months exploring new features and events. Monetization leans hard on impatience, and the higher you climb, the more the game wants you to spend to keep pace. If you enjoy building and optimizing at your own speed and can ignore the spending prompts, Township is a well-made time investment.