Developed by Intelligent Games who later also made the excellent Emperor: Battle for Dune. You can't invite this user because you have blocked him. You can't chat with this user because you have blocked him. You can't chat with this user due to their or your privacy settings. User since Unblock chat User blocked This user's wishlist is not public. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation. Contact:, done in 0.003 seconds.Scarhunter Scarhunter Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. SimTower, Sim Farm, SimSafari, Sim Ant, SimPark, SimFarm for Windows, SimHealth, SimEarth People who downloaded SimIsle for Windows 95 have also downloaded: Note: the download here is the rare Windows version, which features a much faster game engine and interface than the clunky DOS version. Add the neat RPG-style personnel management, and the game is quite addictive in the long haul, despite a steep learning curve that may prove too daunting to beginners, and some cumbersome interface designs. For instance, cutting too many trees to make building materials (wood) and you risk forest fires. You must manage the difficult balance between economic success and ecological harmony. My most favorite "Sim" game of all time aside from SimCity 2000, SimIsle is a fun and challenging tropical island simulation. It may not be the best of the bunch, but, if you can handle the sick feeling you get when the first high-rise goes up on a previously unspoiled island, your free time will soon be the endangered species. In general, SimIsle won't disappoint the high expectations of hardened SimFans. One exception is the game's soundtrack, which ranges from tribal chants to metal rock with no apparent rhyme or reason. Multimedia film clips and sound effects are included but are, for the most part, repetitive and extraneous. The graphics keep the same colorful, busy feel as earlier Maxis titles, with little planes and trucks zooming around the island. If you cut more trees, you can build more hotels more hotels mean more tourists, more tourists mean more cash, etc. As in a RPG, your actions are restricted to those that will help you on your way, and everything you do serves as a stepping stone to success. Each new island presents a different challenge - say, building a tourist industry or developing local cultures - and you must utilize your agents' special skills to achieve these goals within a preset time period (although you can play in FreeForm mode, with no limits). Where SimCity allowed you total freedom in initial creation and then forced you to face the consequences, SimIsle is more concerned with having you think of your actions as a means to an end. The big change in SimIsle, aside from its heavy-duty, protect-the-rainforest theme, is that it's more like a role-playing game than its predecessors. Whatever the case, Maxis has come out with a new sim that manages to keep most of what was good about the other titles, and incorporate just enough change to create a new challenge for all of the SimAddicts out there. I say that after SimFarm, SimTower and SimAnt, they have simply run out of places to develop. The cynic would say that SimIsle represents Maxis' effort to make up for creating a generation of developers, polluters and high-risers with their excellent and incredibly popular SimCity series of games. Humanity cuts them down for paper so we may record our emptiness." -a quote from Kahlil Gibran, on page one of SimIsle's 100-page paper manual. "Trees are a poem the Earth writes across the sky. Will you turn your island into a tourist trap, suck all the resources out of it, or leave it an unspoiled and pristine haven? It's all up to you. Like all Maxis sims, a wide variety of graphs, charts, and maps allow you to plot your progress toward the goal of the scenario. If your agent does not have the right skills to do the job, nothing will happen. This game introduces agents, who you send about the island in order to carry out your directives. There is no specific scenario associated with this island. There is also one island, with a giant ghostly "X" on it, which you can shape and mold any way you wish. Five small islands comprise a tutorial that teaches the things you need to know to play the game. Unlike SimEarth, SimTower, or SimCity, SimIsle - subtitled "Missions in the Rainforest" - allows you to take over the development of any number of islands in a long chain.
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