![]() ![]() Your trains have a limited capacity though, but that’s OK as at the end of each game week you get a new train and the choice of something else, like a new line, an additional carriage (which doubles a trains capacity), more tunnels or bridges in order to cross rivers, or a station upgrade that means that passengers transfer from platform to train quicker.Īnd so Mini Metro gently lulls you into the soothing life of a subway architect. Choose your fateĪs your train passes a station that has passengers waiting, it will stop briefly to allow them to get on as well as dropping off any passengers that are bound for that station or using it as an intersection between lines. You can extend the track to another station, or add a different line that is represented in a different colour. To do this you simply click and drag from one station to the next, and that’s it – they’re connected, and a train will appear and start moving back and forth between them. The passengers are the shape of their destination, and it’s your job to lay out the tracks and trains to get them from A to B. It’s such a simple concept really… You have a selection of stations that you need to connect in order to allow your passengers to travel to their desired destination. Like all the best games (in my opinion), Mini Metro is so very simple to pick up, and yet so very difficult to master. In this world of ever-increasing graphically complex games, designed to be as stunning and as lifelike as possible, it’s always nice to get back to what actually matters about playing games – the game play. ![]()
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