About This Game We're off with our friends on another railroad journey! Margaret didn't just mope around, she's taken out another loan with the bank. This time she has a limited amount of time to fix the broken parts of the railroad, but now the areas are more interesting and have additional objectives. Moreover, the bank has set this land aside for the construction of an entire city, and if Margaret isn't up to the task the banker won't miss his chance to tease our unlucky friends.40 Varied and Challenging Levelsbuild An Entire City!enhanced Graphics & Varied Objectivesplay Without A Timer In Relaxed Mode 6d5b4406ea Title: Next Stop 2Genre: Casual, Simulation, StrategyDeveloper:Ladia GroupPublisher:Ladia GroupRelease Date: 6 Nov, 2016 Next Stop 2 Hacked I love trains so I thought lets give this ago and I really enjoyed it I recommend it I only wish that the first one is on Steam.. It's hard to explain why this game is fun, but it's fun nonetheless. At first glance it looks like some sort of strategy game, but in reality it's a relatively mindless clickfest in the spirit of Farmville. It's sold by Big Fish Games, where the first one is available, and falls into the sort of casual clicky games category they're known for. Now, I never play those sorts of games, which is why this may seem like a novelty to me and therefore "fun."You control up to four workers who are able to work on one command at a time, but you can queue up commands and the next available worker will take the next available task. Basically, things pop up on the map and you tell workers to collect them and then tell workers to take them from the main building to somewhere else or to go fix or upgrade something. While you're busy a-railroadin', a train will come by every so often that you need to service. The real "strategy" is to balance between collection and building. My personal battle was to not queue up so many commands in advance. When there are 10 things to click, I want to click them all, but you'll learn to let some lumber or stone sit while you prioritize ticketing a train. It's always good to keep one worker close to home for when trains come by or you realize you need to do something now (commands can only be canceled if a worker hasn't already undertaken the task). If you send all four workers out, you may have to wait 5-15 seconds for them to make it back and, well, time is money.There are 40 maps and it took me about five hours to beat. At the end of each map, you get to work on a structure in a town. It doesn't do anything to the game and completing all the structures doesn't award you anything. You just need to get 80% of the town built before level 40 or the banker will...do something to you that makes you lose the game. I'm not sure why the bank is making you build a whole town.As far as I can tell, the story makes no sense whatsoever. You're fixing up an old railroad with your uncle while a banker follows you around mocking you after he personally lent you the funds to take on the project for the second time. The story is identical to the first game. I can't tell if the dialogue is poorly written or poorly translated, but it's pretty boring and the subtext is hard to follow.I played it in the morning while I was having my coffee and waking up before work. It hit the ol' cerebral spot. It was just what my brain needed.There's a demo of the first one floating around out there if you're curious. I did that before I bought it here.Do I recommend it? Yes, but just know it's casual city, USA.. I wasn't sure what to expect when I bought this, but I like railroad games, somewhat. The game starts out with a family getting a loan to build a town in a certain amout of time, if you don't the banker forecloses, something like that. The player goes through multiple levels repairing track, selling stuff like wood, concrete etc and when each level is done you build a bit more of the new town. It's more of a time killer but it's actually fun in the process IMO. I run a triple monitor PC and it works fine, no problems. I'll take it to the end and then see if the replay is the same or if they added variations. Nice game though.I'm playing it through a second time now. The game is the same with no variation, so, for the replay aspect I'd say it's low for most people. The game itself can be completed in a few days or less, depending on how much time you spend in a sitting. I'd say it's best to buy when it's on sale if you do.. Really addictive Time Management game that with a little extra polish could be great. There's a few spelling mistakes at the beginning of the game, no achievements or trading cards, and the town upgrade system has a few bugs. However, the gameplay itself is great and quite a decent challenge racing against the clock to complete 40 varied missions. I love the train theme and, whilst there is nothing super innovative here, I was sad when the game was done that there was not more. There's a story but honestly is so paper thin that it kinda gets in the way playing the next level. A detractor is the clock starts during the dialogue segments at the beginning of each level so you need to click quickly or skip to get to the action to try and get the gold medal. Overall worth a play and I'd hope with a sequel they can iron out some of the issues mentioned already and make an even better game :) Still recommended though. Based on the first half hour of game play...This game is not fun for adults. Suitable for 3-5 year old age group perhaps. First 30 minutes clicking back and forth on mail packages and trees that a lumberjack collects. I only played that long because I thought soon.. there would be more to it.
Next Stop 2 Hacked
Updated: Mar 18, 2020
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