Tropico 5 Review
At first glance, Tropico 5 seems dangerously similar to its still-recent predecessor, Tropico 4, and you can be forgiven for wondering whether developer Haemimont games didn't just tweak the graphics and slap it in a box. The music, the characters, most of the gags, and the art are almost indistinguishable. That feeling of deja vu is misleading, however, because Tropico 5 improves on Tropico 4 in one key way: it's a more challenging and engaging city-builder, one that does a better job of making me feel like the tin-pot dictator that I’m supposed to be.
At first glance, Tropico 5 seems dangerously similar to its still-recent predecessor, Tropico 4, and you can be forgiven for wondering whether developer Haemimont games didn't just tweak the graphics and slap it in a box. The music, the characters, most of the gags, and the art are almost indistinguishable. That feeling of deja vu is misleading, however, because Tropico 5 improves on Tropico 4 in one key way: it's a more challenging and engaging city-builder, one that does a better job of making me feel like the tin-pot dictator that I’m supposed to be.