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Friday, January 25, 2013

Ten More Awesome Projects for Your Raspberry Pi

January 25th, 2013Top Story

Ten More Awesome Projects for Your Raspberry Pi

By Alan Henry

Ten More Awesome Projects for Your Raspberry PiWe've shown you how to get started with the Raspberry Pi, the pocket-sized DIY dream computer. Here are ten awesome projects you can put together in a weekend with this $35 board.

This past week, we walked you through some of the common projects people tackle with their Raspberry Pi, like:

However, our guides are just the tip of the iceberg. There are a lot of people out there doing awesome stuff with the Pi, so we've rounded up ten of the best projects you might want to consider:

Build a Combination Pandora Jukebox and Airplay Receiver

Ten More Awesome Projects for Your Raspberry Pi We showed you how to build a Raspberry Pi Airplay Receiver, now take it up a notch and add a Pandora Jukebox to the mix so you can stream tunes to your speakers when you're not listening to your own music. It's a simple project, and Shaun Gehring even shares the code and steps required to get it up and running.


Build Your Own Raspberry Pi-Powered Computer

Ten More Awesome Projects for Your Raspberry Pi It's not for everyone, and it's definitely more expensive than just buying a similar device, but this previously mentioned hand-held Raspberry Pi-powered computer is an excellent DIY project that'll put your skills to the test. It's packed with a 3.5" LCD display and a 64GB SSD, a full physical keyboard and trackpad, and serious processing power. It's not for the quick-and-easy crowd, but if you're a serious hacker or maker, this is a project to try. Don't want to roll your own everything? Try this Raspberry Pi PC in a keyboard (German link) project they we've featured before instead. Alternatively, try this all-in-one Raspberry Pi PC mod that just straps the Pi and all of its gear to the back of a display, perfect for that iMac-like feel.


Build a Robot that Reads Audiobooks or Speaks Your Tweets Aloud

Click to view If your vision is impaired, or you just like doing other things while having a book—or your Twitter stream—read aloud to you, the Raspberry Pi is the perfect device to dedicate to the task. For example, this one-button audiobook player was an ideal gift for a 90-year old grandmother who loves listening to audio books. Just pop in an SD card loaded with a book, and press the button to hear it read aloud. Prefer Twitter to literature? Okay, this adorable wood bowl looks cute and reads your stream aloud in real time. Plus, all of the tools required to build both are available. If an adorable wood bowl isn't your style, there's always Manuel, the Scottish Moose. He'll read your tweets, and look creepy while he does it.


Set Up a Personal Web Server

Ten More Awesome Projects for Your Raspberry Pi The Raspberry Pi is essentially a tiny, headless computer, that you can manage remotely. Servers also happen to be headless computers that you can manage remotely, so it makes sense that someone would turn a Raspberry Pi into a tiny personal web server you can run just about anywhere. We covered it not too long ago, but the full guide walks you through the setup, installing the right packages, installing PHP, and getting it all ready for your automated torrenting/streaming box, your hand-crafted online resume or your own personal landing page.


Use a Raspberry Pi to Automate Time-Lapse Photos

Ten More Awesome Projects for Your Raspberry Pi Time-lapse videos of cityscapes or stars streaming across the sky can make for beautiful video, but to get the same effect, you'll need a dolly that can move, pan, and tilt the shot ever-so-slowly over the course of many hours. Instead of spending a ton of money on a professional rig, Rick Adam's DIY Raspberry Pi-powered dolly does the same for far far cheaper, and can be remotely controlled and managed by an Android phone. This one will take some work if you want to do it yourself, but the proof is in the results.


Embed a Raspberry Pi into your DSLR for Wireless Tethering, USB Backups, and More

Ten More Awesome Projects for Your Raspberry Pi If photography is your hobby, this previously mentioned Raspberry Pi hack essentially embeds the tiny computer into a DSLR to extend its functionality. With their powers combined, you get a DSLR that can wirelessly (or wired, via USB) transmit photos to a PC while you shoot them, as they're saved, control the camera remotely with a PC, tablet, or smartphone, convert images on the fly as you take them, and much much more. Photographer David Hunt managed to fit the Pi and all of the electronics needed into a tiny battery pack that attaches to the bottom of his DSLR's grip.


Use Your Raspberry Pi as a Hacking Tool

Ten More Awesome Projects for Your Raspberry Pi We showed you how to do a little packet sniffing with your Raspberry Pi during the last Evil Week, but you don't have to go that far if you want to use your Raspberry Pi as a computer security and forensics tool. The folks at Pwnie Express have a Debian (not Raspbian, mind you) based penetration-testing and security auditing distro for the Raspberry Pi called Raspberry Pwn. With it comes a myriad of security and networking tools, all rolled into a tiny OS on a tiny portable computer that you can hook up anywhere. Use these powers for good, folks.


Roll a Raspberry Pi-Powered Personal Dropbox Clone

Ten More Awesome Projects for Your Raspberry Pi Dropbox is great, but sometimes you want to be in control of your own files. If you have a Raspberry Pi, you can build your own personal cloud storage service. We discussed the project not too long ago, but the full project uses OwnCloud to create a personally managed and hosted cloud storage service across systems that you own and only you have access to. You'll need some storage to get this one up and running, not to mention the Raspberry Pi and a good case for it, but that's about all. When you're done, you'll have a personal Dropbox that you can use to store anything you want, with as much storage as you're willing to add to it.


Build an Automatic DeviantArt Picture Frame

Ten More Awesome Projects for Your Raspberry Pi Electronic picture frames are cool, but this Raspberry Pi-powered DeviantArt picture frame lets you hook up your Pi to the web and to do an LCD screen (presumably one you have framed on the wall or on your desk) and a DeviantArt account. From there, just use the source code that Cameron Wiebe provides in his walkthough to pull popular photos down for display as a slideshow. You can even tweak the code so you only get images from your favorite artist, or of your favorite subject or topic. You can check out what the frame looks like in the image here, with an illustration by ArtGerm at DeviantArt that Cameron took of the final product (via Wired).


Build a Raspberry Pi-Powered MAME Arcade Table

Ten More Awesome Projects for Your Raspberry Pi The other beautiful thing about the Raspberry Pi being such a tiny computer is that you can task it with things that don't take too much processing power but that you'd like built into other devices, like this Raspberry Pi arcade system that we absolutely love. It's embedded into a coffee table, along with the joystick, buttons, and a 24" display for all of the games you'll play on it. Best of all, the full walkthrough is right there, and if you have the equipment to make it work, it's easy to build. Alternatively, you can consider a different form factor and follow the same guide. Maybe a stand-up cabinet, perhaps?


Want some more Raspberry Pi projects? We've covered quite a few already. Check out our Raspberry Pi tagpage for more projects to tackle.

Additional Resources

Looking to get even more deeply involved in the Raspberry Pi community? Here are a few places to look for more useful information.

These projects and resources are just the beginning. Remember, if there's a job that a mini computer can automate, or a task that you wish you could use a computer for but need one small enough to attach to something else or fit into a tiny space, the Raspberry Pi is probably a good option, and it's easy to configure and set up. Use the tools we've given you so far this week and you'll be ready to tackle almost anything.

Photo by Denise Kappa (Shutterstock), maymak (Shutterstock), Pakhnyushcha (Shutterstock), Anan Kaewkhammul (Shutterstock), and jorisvo (Shutterstock).

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My Day With The New SimCity

January 25th, 2013Top Story

My Day With The New SimCity

By Kirk Hamilton

My Day With The New SimCityLast week, I headed over to Maxis headquarters in Emeryville to spend a big chunk of time playing SimCity. I decided that rather than attempt to list all of the features of a game this dense, I'd just keep a journal of my day. So that's what I did.

Who's ready for some hot city-planning action?

Many of the screenshots in this article are actually from the city I made while I was there (née "Kotakuville"), but as I couldn't get all of the images I took, a few are stock screengrabs that EA sent over. Those'll be designated, though the differences are pretty clear. The version of the game I played was near to complete but still had some bugs, and the final version is available for purchase on March 5.

Here we go. Hope I don't talk about food/Adam Sessler/Fire Emblem too much.

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

8:54 AM I am still in my apartment, and this preview session starts soon. I'm IMing with Jason Schreier about Fire Emblem: Awakening, which we've both been playing. I've been having a hard time not comparing everything to Fire Emblem lately. The Dead Island severed torso thing is happening, which is proving to be a distraction. Also, I have to pay rent on my way to the train station.

8:57 AM I make a joke to Jason about how I'm including our IM conversation in my journal. He says, "hahaha. excellent. meta."

Time Passes…

10:30-ish AM I arrive at Maxis. I'm running a bit late, but thankfully they still haven't gotten started. I head into a boardroom where they've lined up a bunch of computers for us to play. The usual press folks are here.

10:39 AM Maxis general manager Lucy Bradshaw and SimCity creative director Ocean Quigley come out to introduce the game. They seem genuinely happy to have us here, and proud of what Maxis has put together. I'm sitting at the end of a long table full of reporters, which feels exciting. I'm like the chairman, check it out:

My Day With The New SimCity

Well-known video game pundit Adam Sessler is sitting to my right. In the interest of Objectify a Male Tech Writer Day, I'll add that I met him for the first time that day, and he seems like a lovely man. He was wearing a snappy hat.

10:41 AM They show us a splashy intro video of the game. The audio is clipping, and it is kind of intense.

FIRE EMBLEM TEST: Is this intro video cooler than Fire Emblem: Awakening? No.

10:43 AM The press materials here say I get to take 10 screenshots. I'm such a screenshot shotgunner, I'm a little bit worried I'll get too excited.

10:44 AM Lead producer Kip Katsarelis gets up to give us tips about how to play. If we want, we'll have 5-6 hours to play SimCity today, which he mentions is a "rushed" experience. I'm not sure I'll be able to play for that many hours at once, but we'll see.

10:45 AM The music that's playing for Katsarelis' demo is quite nice. Chris Tilton did this music for this game. Very soothing.

10:46 AM The PR guy steps in and turns the demo music down. Boo, PR guy!

10:47 AM Just watching Katsarelis use the road-making tool in his demo makes it clear that I'm not going to learn much about this game even if I take all 6 hours. There's a looot here. So many variations, just on the road tool! Arced roads, straight roads, and all these different road types. And my god, so many menus. This is a Stephen Totilo dream-game.

FIRE EMBLEM TEST: Is this demo more interesting than Fire Emblem: Awakening? No, but this is actually pretty cool. I'm looking forward to playing this game.

10:51 AM I had forgotten that they call things you drop on the map "Ploppables." Ew.

Time to Start Playing

10:51 AM Time to start playing. I open up a tutorial called "Getting Started."

10:53 AM Adam Sessler's phone vibrates. He has gotten a text message.

10:55 AM The tutorial involves helping the town connect with the outside world. I tried to connect a road to the highway running down the side of my empty pasture, but I failed, somehow. My road just got... stuck... and there doesn't appear to be a way to get out of the basic road tool or use the bulldozer (?), this being a tutorial. Slight panic sets in. Why does this always happen to me at these events?

10:58 AM I have made peace with the fact that somehow, I failed the tutorial. I built a road out to the highway, and it built "wrong." So, I wound up stuck with a crazy misplaced ramp jutting out, with no way to bulldoze anything. This does not bode well. For me, I mean, not for the game. I wound up out in the menus and was embarrassed about asking a PR person for help, so I thought I'd just dive into a full game. So. Full game! Who needs tutorials anyway?

11:00 AM Wow, I started a new city and two minutes later, it looks like this:

My Day With The New SimCity

11:01 AM Just kidding. That's a press screenshot. In reality, I have located the bulldozer. Feelin pretty good about that.

11:03 AM I have decided that whatever town I make will be called "Kotakuville," and the roads will form a giant K. Guess what else starts with K? My name. Oh, yeah. I am Ozymandias.

11:05 AM I've begun zoning different areas for industrial, commercial and residential. Everything is tied to the roads this time—you can't just go zone random land that isn't on a road. That makes transportation much more of an artery of the city, and makes it simpler to place your zones in places where you can easily supply them. I believe there are different sounds for each of the three main SimCity zones—for example, for industrial, it makes a metallic sound. I think this is very neat.

11:05 AM Kotakuville will rely on oil power. Let's see how this goes.

11:06 AM It just started raining! In the game, I mean.

11:07 AM My city is broke. Not brokEN, as in, "Damn, your city is BROKE." But like, we have no money. I'm going to try passing a bond measure, because I don't want to raise taxes, because I need to be liked.

11:08 AM My city needed water, so I bulldozed some houses and dropped a water plant where they used to be. Sorry, folks.

Click to view 11:09 AM Having some fairly extreme graphical slowdown on my computer with the road-building tool. No idea what kind of PC this is, but it seems pretty beefy. Huh. This isn't the final version of the game or anything, so there are liable to still be bugs and the like. This must be one of them.

11:11 AM Placed my city hall up at the top of the "K." Away from the plebes.

11:11 AM Now that I have a city hall, I've been invited to formally name my city. Hello, Kotakuville!

11:16 AM I try to find someone to ask how to take a screenshot. Also, I got a bear claw. It's pretty good! There was almost no coffee left. I can take a screenshot with the "C" key. Because of course, using F12 would be way too… steamy.

11:18 AM Wrapping up the bear claw.

FIRE EMBLEM TEST: Was this bear claw more nourishing than Fire Emblem: Awakening? Not emotionally, but perhaps nutritionally.

Burning Sensations, Server Woes

11:21 AM Uh oh, my city has an abandoned building with no power. I'm… not sure what to do about it. Likely the first of many bad signs.

My Day With The New SimCity

11:21 AM There's a taqueria in my commercial district called "Burning Sensations." I wonder if the people there read Burning Questions? Anyway that is a terrible name for a Taqueria. Sheesh, residents of Kotakuville.

11:23 AM Our preview session appears to be having server issues, which is making it difficult for some people to play. Hmm. My game is still okay.

11:25 AM My factories all have funny names. "Hair Glue Factory." "Kensherr Magnetrons." "Donut Dough Industries." Kotakuville is a center of industry!

11:30 AM They're showing us another video. While they're doing that, they're also shutting down all of our games to cycle the server, which will theoretically fix the server issues some people are having. Again, huh. This does not bode well for a game where whenever they turn off the servers, every person in the world has to stop playing.

11:33 AM This demo is about all of the different ways you can build an identity for your city. How you can add "personality" and culture to you city. I wonder if you have too much culture, if you can get SimHipsters? I feel like probably not.

11:37 AM We are still not playing the game, because the servers are still down. The launch of this game may well be pretty interesting! And by "interesting" I mean "possibly a disaster." Note that I write this entry at 11:37. THIRTY SEVEN. Coincidence? I THINK NOT

11:40 AM Looks like they've got the servers up now. Yup, servers are back up.

Back up and Running

11:41 AM Splines have been reticulated on Kotakuville. Back to it.

11:42 AM PR seems audibly relieved that we didn't lose Kotakuville. Well. I'm glad, too!

11:45 AM Spent a while messing around with roads. Accidentally bulldozed a bunch of businesses. Sorry, guys. I'm struck by how comparatively small my city is, compared with past SimCity games. I haven't filled my area, but I can see the boundaries. I guess this is as big as a city gets?

11:47 AM I've decided to build up a commercial district to the west of the K. The grid-building is a little different, since the game is more fluid than its predecessors. They give you visible guidelines to build your roads, which is a cool approach. Every time you start to lay road, these dotted lines appear to show you where you could put them to keep them symmetrical. It's flexible and seems to work pretty well.

11:51 AM Oh dear, my city hasn't had sewage this entire time. More like Stinkville 1.0, amiright?

11:51 AM When I try to drop a sewage outflow pipe, it tells me I "must plop on a snap point!" Ew, again! Because sewage!

My Day With The New SimCity

11:53 AM I still have a 68% approval rating, despite the fact that no one in my city has had working plumbing since they moved here. This must be what Obama feels like!

11:54 AM I paused it to do some zoning, and the rain paused in midair. Neat.

11:55 AM Raised taxes to 10%. Hope this doesn't cause an occupy movement.

Plains, Trains and Power Supplies

11:55 AM The power just blew! In the Maxis buildings, I mean. Not in the game. All of our computers just went down. Hmm, no end of technical problems here, I guess. Then again, string together this many PCs, and you're bound to have some power issues.

12:01 PM It has been suggested that my Macbook is sucking too much power and causing the crash. This seems unlikely, but I may have to plug in somewhere else. I felt this was worth noting. Now I feel like everyone is looking at me.

12:06 PM Took a minute to tweet about this whole Deep Silver severed torso thing, which is happening today, but which most of you will probably have forgotten about by the time the embargo for this preview lifts. But hey, let's remember for a minute. The torso thing! It's probably been replaced in the collective consciousness by some new offense, but man, that was pretty fucking grim!

12:07 PM Kotakuville is still chugging along after the power outage. I lost some of my recent zoning, but that's it. Actually, I may not have even lost that. At least now we know that if you lose power while playing, you own't really lose progress.

12:07 PM Everyone else here has bigger monitors than I do. Maybe their HUGE MONITORS are what's sucking power. Not my laptop. Jeez.

12:07 PM Oh, turns out I didn't lose any progress. Nice.

This must be what Obama feels like!

12:08 PM City Hall has given me an incentive to hit a population goal and incorporate into a small city. It looks like "incentives" are little mini-goals that help you branch out and try to hit new waypoints.

12:09 PM Music update: The music changes when you pause it, and goes through a filter. But as far as I can tell, it doesn't do that cool layering thing with the camera-zoom that it was doing in the last demo.

12:11 PM Power went down again. They made me unplug my laptop.

12:13 PM Still waiting on reboot.

12:15 PM Tara Long from Revision3 is the only one who got a computer that isn't on this circuit, so she's been playing uninterrupted. Taraaaaaaa! *shakes fist*

12:30 PM Power problems resolved. Okay, hopefully the game won't crash anymore.

Time to Take Out The Trash

12:30 PM Now that I've seen it a bunch of times, I can confirm that the SimCity menu is... pretty clean-looking.

12:33 PM Sewage has been taken care of. Whew. Okay, here's what Kotakuville looks like now.

12:38 PM A little while with no updates. I expanded the roads to the southeast, and did a tutorial about the budget panel. A good sign that I just sort of got into it for a while. I can tell it's going to take a few revisions to get this thing right. I bet Kotakuville 4.0 will be pretty good.

12:40 PM Raised taxes again. Sorry everyone. I've taken out two bonds, which was probably a bad call, in retrospect.

12:44 PM I've been notified that "Air pollution just drifted in from outside the city." Hmm. I'm not sure what to do about it, so I move on.

12:49 PM I'm doing pretty well. Getting some tips from another developer, dropped a hospital, and now have $72,000 simoleons in the bank. Not bad.

12:51 PM Fire! We have a fire. Yikes. Though also: Hooray! This is sort of a SimCity milestone. Now to do what all mayors do when there's a fire: quickly build a fire department.

Click to view 12:52 PM Ocean Quigley just came by to show me the camera-filters. There are a few different color-filters you can use to look at your city. You can watch 'em in the video Chris put together to the side there. They're neat. Quigley says it can be jarring to go back to the other way of doing things. I put on "soft" and then "vintage" and find I do like how it makes my city look. Really, even on my kind of janky monitor, this is a lovely-looking game.

12:55 PM I've somehow wound up wandering into the neighboring area of Norwich Hills, which looks like a second whole city area. (I'll explain this more later.)

1:22 PM Lengthy pause from updates. I did a lot of things recently. I ate some Chipotle! Will you believe me if I tell you that as far as I know, that was the first Chipotle I've ever had in my life? Because it was. Hmm. It wasn't half bad. I see why people go there when it's the only option. I don't know if it's as good as "Burning Sensation," but then, what is?

How The Multi-City Setup Works

Longer Update: My PR helper Charlie showed me a lot about the way the game scales, and some of how the multiplayer works. It's pretty cool. Basically, the game exists on three levels: Cities, Regions, and the worldwide economy. A region can hold a number of cities, and any player online can control any city. Regions have anywhere from three to 16 city-spaces, which are pre-designed. (Later, Katsarelis confirms to me that you can't terraform like in past SimCity games—the city-spaces are all pre-made.) Each region also has a "Great Works Site," which can have something mega, like an Arcology or an international airport or a space center. Each one of those has an impact on every city in the region, bringing in money, or tourists, or other sorts of benefits.

So, like I was noticing, the cities themselves are pretty small—you can't build some huge Dredd-esque Megacity One. That makes the game more complex. I can tell that once I've built a few cities, it'll get a lot easier to plan out how I'm going to do what I'm doing. The basic idea is to have one city be residential/commercial, one city commercial with some industrial, and one city industrial. People will live in the residential city and commute to the industrial or commercial cities to work. Of course, your other cities will influence one another, so you'll start getting pollution runoff from one city, or have your residents go to the industrial city to work. And your friends can take over (or build) your neighboring cities, too. I get it, and I like it. It's very different from past SimCity games, of course.

Kotakuville, meanwhile, is very much in the awkward, possibly terminal adolescence of the "First SimCity City." Heading over to Maxis employees' regions to look at established cities, I'm now aware of just how smart you can be with your layout, and how you can maximize the limited geography to get the most out of a city. Here is a press screenshot that gives you a sense of what I'm talking about:

My Day With The New SimCity

1:28 PM I've been writing all of this with the SimCity music going in my ears, and I have to say, this is some great music to write to. Good show, Tilton. The tick-tock, pizzicato strings have got me in a rhythm. Might have try working to this music in general.

Multiplayer

1:29 PM Okay where was I? Right, multiplayer. So the way multiplayer works is, you can invite friends to come and set up shop in cities anywhere in your region. (Or in the blank areas where a city could be. See here:

Once they come in and run one of your cities, there's no going back—if they mess up your city, it's messed up for good. The idea will be, then, that you'll be playing on a server next to people, which will be a different sort of experience than the one I've been having so far.

1:33 PM Kip is going to walk us through multiplayer. This is most of the stuff I just talked about. He says that after 4-6 hours, players are going to want to step out and make another city. He's going into how you can share services from city to city around your region, gift money and resources to one another, send firefighters and police, etc.

1:43 PM I pipe up to ask Kip about a 16-City map. He obliges and loads one up for us. It's much, much bigger than what we were working with, but very cool. Quite big! Loading the map is taking quite a while, since the game still isn't quite finished.

1:53 PM Back to Kotakuville. I keep going for the undo button once I accidentally lay a road incorrectly . In this game, there is no undo. There is only Bulldozer.

1:57 PM Kotakuville looks quite nice at night. I... didn't get any screenshots of it. Sorry. You'll have to take my word for it. Oh ok, here's a press screenshot:

My Day With The New SimCity

1:58 PM This soundtrack is very much a fan of the lydian mode. Points off for over-reliance on Lydian, Tilton! There are other ways to conjure "airy and thoughtful!"

1:59 PM JK that's not really fair, I mean I really like lydian too.

FIRE EMBLEM TEST: Is this the lydian mode better than Fire Emblem: Awakening? Tough call. There is some lydian IN Fire Emblem: Awakening, so they're kind of related, even. Jury is out on this one.

2:01 PM My people are protesting. Too many deaths per day in my city! What a drag. I should probably upgrade my clinics.

2:02 PM I zoomed in on a sick sim walking down the street, puking everywhere. It's not as horrifying as it sounds. He's going to the hospital, which is pretty far away.

2:03 PM I've gotten a few achievements. "Bad News, Creeps" for having my police catch a criminal, and "Sand through my fingers," for spending expenses over $5,000 per month. I also got "Awfulest Mayor Ever!", which is an achievement for having an approval rating below 10%. Whoops. When did I get that award? (He asked, like every awful mayor ever.)

2:05 PM I upgraded my clinic with an add-on for an ambulance.

2:08 PM Well, Kotakuville is starting to look pretty nice.

2:10 PM Again my city burns. And there's nothing I can do. Boo. To illustrate what's going on, albeit in a much grander, more successful city, here is another official press screenshot:

My Day With The New SimCity

2:12 PM Some of my factories are closing because there "aren't enough places to ship freight." I gotta say, I get the sense playing this game that there is an entirely new feel to the way all the systems interlock. It's cool, though overwhelming at the moment.

2:13 PM Good example of a system that isn't overwhelming: I built a school, but then had to build school bus stops to go to my various neighborhoods. It's pretty cool, how it works—very intuitive. As you place stops, the streets light up green; you have to get all the streets where people live to light up green. Here's an example of a similar thing with a clinic:

My Day With The New SimCity

2:15 PM Having one of those SimCity moments where I think I'm doing well, but as it turns out, my city is this close to being abandoned. I don't believe that's happening, but you never know.

Ghost Towns

2:16 PM Speaking of that, one cool thing is that you can just "Abandon" a city or region, and other people can "find" it and start playing it. Could well be we'll start to get a raft of cool, weird abandoned cities, and no one will know who made them. I like that idea. It's sort of like Jason Rohrer's awesome "Chain World" Minecraft experiment.

2:17 PM Time to make a second city. Kotakuville can cruise for a while and earn money.

2:19 PM In two minutes, I seem to have burned through my neighboring town's budget building a second city that is entirely roads and a coal power plant. This is going to generate revenue? … Okay.

2:26 PM Since we're meant to be messing around with multiplayer, I'm now connected to everyone else, and have been informed that someone has come to my city to take a look at it. That's something you can do with any public city. It's of course possible to make your city or region private.

2:39 PM I got some coffee! I realized that I hadn't had much coffee today.

FIRE EMBLEM TEST: Is this coffee better than Fire Emblem: Awakening? Right now, yes.

2:43 PM The overhead viewing angle is pretty cool:

My Day With The New SimCity

2:45 PM Whoops, just dropped a dump into my residential area.

2:46 PM Aaaand, read over that last entry and realized how it reads, decided to keep it in, since it is sort of what I did, actually.

2:50 PM My cops are not keeping up with crime in the city, I've been told. I'm always so bad at the SimCity balancing act at first.

Plumbing

2:53 PM I've fixed my water system. Fun to watch water pump out to houses, and have their angry red water-taps vanish as they become hydrated. People are like crops.

My Day With The New SimCity

2:58 PM I'm focusing on figuring out how transit works; there are so many different kinds of roads, and you can upgrade and downgrade roads depending on what you need.

3:00 PM Everyone must be escorted to the bathroom. Towel-service jokes are being made. This is s.o.p. for a game studio visit, by the way.

3:05 PM I'm pretty much stepping back from active SimCity at this point, doing the thing where you leave your city to run without you for a bit and build up some money. This is definitely one of the things I like about SimCity; it allows you to take breaks while still making progress.

FIRE EMBLEM TEST: Is taking a break from SimCity better than Fire Emblem: Awakening? No. SUB-TEST: Can you play Fire Emblem: Awakening while allowing your SimCity city to build up money over time? YES YOU CAN

(Am I going to do that now? No, because that would be rude.)

3:08 PM It's a little thing, but when the sun moves in the game, the shadows of the buildings move, too. It's very nice-looking.

3:08 PM Filter update: I have gotten very used to the "Vintage" filter I have on everything.

3:13 PM I'm a bit SimCity'd out. Kip is going to talk to us about multiplayer again, which is all well and good, but I've seen as much as I can see for now. I'm going to talk to him, then go home, I think.

So here we have it; this is where Kotakuville wound up:

My Day With The New SimCity

Overall Impressions

The SimCity beta will start this weekend, so if you can get in, you can relive my first hour over and over. While I was at Maxis, I spoke with Katsarelis about a bunch of interesting stuff relating to the game and what I played, so I'll have that on Kotaku soon.

My overall sense of SimCity is that it is faithful to the general feel and flow of past SimCity games but dramatically different in several ways. It's a lovely-looking game that is fun to interact with; Maxis has achieved their goal on that front. I enjoyed using it, moment-to-moment. The other key difference is more sweeping, and it stems from the fact that you can't save your game, not in the traditional sense. Specifically, you can't save a copy of your game, then save in a new slot if you want to preserve the version you just saved. There's a sense of forward momentum to everything, and I can see how playing the game could start to feel like writing in the sand.

Everything is a bit ephemeral, which can be freeing, but over the long term, it might make it harder to get too invested in your cities. You can't back up a version of your work in order to preserve a moment in time, or download famous cities that your friends have re-created. It really is different from past SimCity games in that way, especially when you combine that with the new game's always-online ecosystem. This SimCity is happening in the present-tense. I'm not at all ready to say it's a bad thing, because the game I played was vibrant, interesting, and fun. But it certainly is different.

tiny family
no plumbing, but hey, okay
burning sensations

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