Cities Skylines Ii Online

The art style is more realistic but also flatter. Buildings have better texture detail, but the global lighting can feel washed out. Worse, forced Temporal Anti-Aliasing (TAA) creates noticeable ghosting and softness in motion. There’s no native resolution rendering option. Mods can help, but vanilla visuals range from “pleasant” to “muddy” depending on time of day and weather.

In two years, with mods, DLC, and performance fixes, this could be a 9.5/10 masterpiece. Today, it’s an ambitious, frustrating, deeply promising foundation. Buy it if you want to build the foundation now . Wait if you want to live in the finished house. Cities Skylines II

Instead of just unlocking buildings by population, you earn “development points” from milestones (e.g., “have 5,000 highly educated citizens”). You choose what to unlock next—a new power plant, a transit hub, or advanced road tools. It gives a sense of strategic choice rather than linear grind. The Mixed: Potential Held Back Performance & Optimization This is the elephant in the room. On release, even high-end PCs (RTX 4090, i9-13900K) struggled to maintain 60fps at 1440p. The game is heavily CPU-bound due to the deep agent simulation—every citizen, every car, every good being tracked. Colossal Order has improved performance with patches (LOD adjustments, occlusion culling), but medium-range systems still see stutter once cities pass 100k population. The game looks good, but not this demanding good. The art style is more realistic but also flatter

Zoning isn’t just about “jobs vs. homes.” Industry now has depth: a timber company needs wood, which requires forestry, which needs workers and road access. You can specialize districts for petrochemicals, agriculture, or electronics. You’ll watch raw materials travel to processors, then to factories, then to commercial zones. When your highway clogs, the electronics plant slows down, then shops run low on luxury goods, then citizens complain about “missing services.” It’s an actual system, not window dressing. There’s no native resolution rendering option