

I think that for the cheap price, Suburbia Inc. Overall, I'd definitely recommend Suburbia! It's such a fun and competitive game that I really enjoy. I'd recommend watching Rahdo's runthrough of Suburbia Inc., as well as his final thoughts on it to better understand these issues with the expansion. These issues are solvable, say, by removing these narrow goals from the selection in the beginning. tiles, and the tiles are so much more diluted that there is a possibility that only one or two airports make it into the game, thus making your goal useless. Click here to learn more Complete Set of Kickstarter Extras - Wooden Interactive Markers, Metal Coins, 11 Nightlife Promo Tiles, 15 Color Sets, 2 Start Player Marker Lights w/Holder (not pictured) Wooden Interactive Markers - 16 Restaurants, 15 Briefcases, 11 Education, 10 Airports, 9 Skyscrapers, 2 Car Dealerships. However, couple this with the numerous more Suburbia Inc. If you were to have this goal in the base game, there is a great chance that enough airports will show up throughout the game that you can build to win this goal. Some goals relate to specific tiles for example, a goal for having the most airports. This relates to another problem that some people face, which is how the new tiles from the expansion dilute the individual/competitive goals. This makes it difficult to differentiate them. tiles do not appear different from the normal Suburbia tiles.

There are certain quirks about it, however, that can put a damper on some parts of the game. is that it's a great expansion that only makes the game more replayable. I own and love both, but they feel so different that I've never thought to categorize them together by theme.įrom what I've heard about Suburbia Inc. Suburbia is far more thematic, while 7 Wonders has a more pasted on theme. While the end result is similar (building a "city"), the gameplay and mechanics are extremely different. I do believe that Suburbia is very different from 7 Wonders. I have not played Machi Koro, but from what I've heard about it, I can say that Suburbia is a far better and more strategic city building game. So since every game has different combinations of tiles to place and different goals you are trying to reach, your strategy/city will always be different I think this makes the game very replayable. These encourage you to do certain actions (have the most residential buildings, have the highest income, etc.) to get a VP bonus at the end of the game. In addition, every game there will be different individual and competitive goals. Obviously, you'll see some tiles in most games by coincidence (some are duplicates) but the overall combinations will always differ. This provides a large number of combinations and variety among the tiles you'll see every game. This leaves another 20 (roughly) from each round left in the bags that don't get used. In a 2 player game, you only draw 15 (I believe) tiles from each round, A B or C.

I think it absolutely holds up after multiple plays. Suburbia is one of my favorite games, and I worried the same thing before I bought it.
