I mean no disrespect to Apple Arcade subscribers here, but thereās a growing trend where very good games appear on the service, are widely ignored by the majority who arenāt a part of it, then get to be enjoyed like brand new games for the first time by everyone else when they finally land on other platforms.
I wrote about one of these last month, Lego: Builderās Journey, and today Iām writing about another, Mini Motorways. The sequel of sorts to Mini Metro, a game I am aghast to find is now seven years old, Mini Motorways first came out in 2019 on Appleās subscription service, but has now also dropped on Steam, meaning Iām getting to play it and enjoying every second of it.
Gita wrote about the game back in 2019 when she played it on the phone, and while everything she said about how terrible cars are is still very much true, Iām still in love with this game for most of the same reasons I fell in love with Mini Metro
Just like Mini Metro wasnāt really about trains, Mini Motorways isnāt really about cars either. Sure, there are cursory nods to how roads work, but after around four seconds of playing youāll realise this isnāt a serious simulation of urban planning.
The theme is the excuse to hit us with what this series does best: elegantly escalating puzzle challenges that in most circumstances would quickly become infuriating were they not draped in the most chill visuals and interface imaginable.
Just look at this trailer. Anyone who has lived in a car-driven city will know that major motorway construction is hell on Earth, and anyone who has ever had to drive to work knows that being stuck in traffic is also hell on Earth, just in a smaller place.
Here, though, the reality of whatās being simulated is stripped away to the point where huge intersections bristling with traffic are represented by beautifully minimalist traffic lights, and motorways are brought to life simply by dragging them across a map.
Thereās still pressure to be felt here, as every game of Mini Motorways is about building the right roads fast enough to meet increasing demandāif you donāt, itās game overābut every time Iāve failed Iāve simply said, āAh, oh well, that was lovely, letās do that again.ā
The gameās challenges never feel unfair though, or stressful, theyāre just there to ensure this is a game that gets slightly harder the longer you play it, and that there will inevitably come a point where this all becomes too much, and itās game over no matter how well your planning and construction speed has gone.
And when it does, thatās cool, you can just slide over to a different city. There are loads to choose from, each with regional colour palettes and a rough approximation of their environment, so you can try it all over again.
Mini MotorwaysĀ is out now on Steam, and is also coming to Nintendo Switch in 2022.
