

I have only been playing for a day, but I love it. The game starts off kind of slow, but can quickly spiral out of control if you don’t pay attention. There are several modes of play and several basic maps of real places. The basic colors and no frills graphics are great and allow you to focus on game play. I found this game while looking for something that didn’t require hour of micromanaging, nor guilt for not playing, nor ads to have to tap through at randomly inopportune times. Im havent read much about how it works and there may be tricks I am not using, but I just wanna get this out: Why will trains not stop at stations when they overcrowd or only take less than the train can handle? I’ve been stuck on Cairo because eventually the trains will just stop stopping at the stations overcrowding. Custom maps? Draw where rivers are, choose how many lines and what their colors are (maybe a limit of 7 lines or so to keep the game somewhat difficult) Maybe even be able to upload your maps to a online community? Hard- Extreme but without the requirements and a bit easier than actual Extreme I think there should be more modes: Extreme mode is very hard to get with its requirements.Įasy-The current game but stations can hold more people without a interchange I do, however, have some suggestions and complaints: I definitely think you should consider buying if you like games that involve organizing things in patterns and such. This is a really great, unique, and entertaining game. This game desperately needs other game modes, especially with the price it’s asking, but it has tons of potential. A logic problem gets turned into a random scramble. Likewise, it makes sense for more and more stations to pop up quickly in the beginning, but for stations to continue popping up at the same rate once the system is pretty big makes no sense and takes the fun out of it. When and where stations pop up seems too random and are arranged in no way like they would be in a city (denser in the middle, less dense around the peripheries). The best part of the game is getting to design your own metro system and having to figure out what’s most efficient. However, having been playing it so much, I’ve found a couple frustrating things with the game play. The concept is really cool and the fact that the maps are really cities makes it that much more enjoyable. The aesthetics are wonderful and the feedback to touch is very well thought out. I have been addicted to this app since I downloaded it. For the puzzle gamer it has depth and presents a gameplay mechanic unlike any other I’ve seen. It’s surreal.įor a casual gamer mini metro is unique in concept and fun. Friends watching me play have asked whether air was seeing some kind of real time map of their city.
INTERCHANGE MINI METRO FULL
Even better is how the UI is expertly crafted to resemble a real metro map, full of colorful lines and simplified shapes. The rails must take into account water, and the water layouts correspond to real world cities - from Hong Kong to San Francisco to London and the developer’s home of Auckland (which apparently has no real metro) the theming is top notch. The process of organizing and rerouting your lines would be relentlessly addictive, but the polish of this app pushes it into a masterpiece. If too many passengers are waiting, your stations overcrowd, ending the game. You drag metro lines between different types of stations, in order to allow passengers to move between them. The concept of mini metro is so simple that anyone can understand it in less time that it’ll take your next train to arrive. "Mini Metro: fun game simulates planning and running public transit system." - Cory Doctorow, Boing Boing "Take my word for it that a game about mass-transit system design can be a tense, white-knuckle thriller." - Owen Faraday, Pocket Tactics "If you love the city-planning aspect of Sim City but can't handle the pressure of playing god, then you may have just found your new favorite time-waster." - Ashley Feinberg, Gizmodo

INTERCHANGE MINI METRO MAC
Mac Game of the Year in over 30 countries.Mini Metro, the sublime subway simulator, now on iPhone and iPad.
