Dorfromantik has been out in Early Access on Steam for a while now, and was excellent even then. But now it is out-out, and like the headline is saying, you should definitely play it.
The game can very loosely be described as a city-builder, but thatās not quite fair, since that label conjures up images of Cities Skylines, or SimCity, games with a certain amount of complexity, and zones, and rules. Dorfromantik may have the construction of settlements as one of its most basic tasks, but it couldnāt be further from those games in its execution.
Instead, itās a lot more like a board game. Youāre given a blank space, the game feeds you one random hexagonal tile at a timeāmaybe itāll be a little river, maybe itāll be some cottagesāand all you have to do is put it down. The only rules are that it needs to be touching another tile thatās already down. Thatās it! You can be scored for how āconnectedā that tile is if thatās the way you want to play (buildings connected to buildings, river tiles to more river, etc), but if you also just want to play like a sandbox, building whatever the hell comes up, then youāre also free to do that as well.
Hereās how Riley described it while writing about the Early Access version last year:
In the midst of my strategy deliberations, Iāll come across a tile that would just look lovely in a spot that wonāt give me a lot of points, and I canāt resist plunking it down. Areas will start to grow naturally as I pursue points, but then Iāll be taken by the aesthetics and start shaping them how I want, creating a little hamlet by a lake or a train line through a scenic wood, points be damned. You can min-max everything and gamble on the RNG, or you can just build a nice landscape and then sit back and watch the smoke rise from the houses, the train chug along its little track, or the boats navigate your canals. Once I saw a deer!
The whole time youāre doing that, everything from the sound to the music to the art design, is just incredibly relaxing. Thereās even the worldās most satisfying āpopā sound every time you drop a tile down, which is so good itās almost tactile, again harking back to that whole board game feel.
If everything Iāve just written above hasnāt painted enough of a picture, hereās the gameās launch trailer:
The game is available on a number of PC shopfronts, with links to each in the launch trailerās description.