I mean, I hope they add them. Maybe have bike parking or bikes on trams/trains be a thing as well. Still, I would rather that they flesh-out trains and trams and metros as they have done.
Seeming the first DLC is bridges and ports in Q2 2024, not sure we will be getting them very soon. Maybe they come with it as technically you can have cycle lanes on bridges probably as a free update.
A sequel game comes out and doesn't have all the bells and whistles the original had after 10 years of DLC? Broken, unplayable, garbage cash-grab obviously. Doesn't matter if it has more than the first game, if some of those are different from the original game too, obviously.
My biggest gripe with The Sims community. It's bleeding into other games.
I mean, at the very least I can see where people are coming from with The Sims in some cases. In order to have some features, for instance, seasons in TS4, I would need to buy the DLC for it all over again; even if I already have the expansion for TS3. Now that does not remove the fact that each title in the series has been markedly different from the one before, with a distinct feature set from the ones before, but I can at least understand where people are coming from.
The present kerfuffle with CS2, on the other hand, seems completely unwarranted to me. Like, we are getting a game that has many if not most of the features that CS1 does even with it's DLC, together with a boatload of new stuff: A more fleshed-out economic system, more dynamic simulation of citizens, tons of new tools for managing transit systems, completely new and much better quality assets... The list goes on.
I have yet to see someone give a criticism that does not seem like a nitpick to me. "Oh, there are cranes in a residential construction site," or "Oh, there are white stripes on the roads," or "Oh, this public building has a parking lot on it." "GaME RuiNEd!"
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u/jokteur Sep 11 '23 edited Sep 11 '23
Does it ? On the image here you can see that these are very tall windows: https://youtu.be/JTmXoIGWzdg?feature=shared&t=1776
Like the palazzo tower in Las vegas, which has the illusion of being small but is actually huge.