Test Cities: Skylines 2 on your PC within Steam’s refund window using this enormous, player-built benchmark city

Cities: Skylines 2 is out now on PC, and for those wondering if their system can handle the game as they grow their cities, one player has the answer for you.

Last week, developer Colossal Order and publisher Paradox Interactive released a joint statement at the Paradox Forum, in which they “acknowledged concerns about Cities: Skylines 2 achievements” on the back of the announcement regarding the game’s minimum and recommended PC requirements. There stood: “Cities: Skylines 2 is a next generation title and obviously requires certain hardware requirements.

Of course, anyone who purchases the game through Steam can refund the title within 14 days as long as they’ve played for less than two hours, but since the whole point of the game is to make your city bigger and more developed over time, this is questionable. if you were to start from scratch you would get an accurate measure of performance in that window. That’s where Reddit user kjmci’s massive population creation of 100,000 comes into the picture.

“Given the news of performance issues and Steam’s short two-hour playtime refund window, several people asked early access creators to provide a city with a large population to use to benchmark the experience on their PC. In response to that request, this is Ruston,” they wrote.

Benchmark your PC with this early access city of 100,000 built on the release version of Cities: Skylines II by r/CitiesSkylines

“I spent most of last weekend running to 100k using the base game as is (although ‘unlock all’ and ‘unlimited money’ were enabled). Ruston is built on the Twin Mountains map and most of the buildings, zones, transportation modes and mechanisms should be unlocked and placed somewhere in the city.

The user has posted a download link and instructions in his/her Reddit post, but as with any unofficial download, proceed at your own risk. They also noted that those using their city may notice strange, silver rectangles on the roads instead of vehicles. However, this has nothing to do with performance – it’s simply because they build as they go San Francisco redeemed the set and use the muscle car models.

For more games like Cities: Skylines 2, be sure to check out our recommendations best simulation games. You can also read our overview of the best pc games.

Related Post