Livestock farming and pet adoption have officially arrived in Town to City. The "Our Animals Update" (Version 1.1) is live right now, expanding the economic and aesthetic toolset for your 19th-century Mediterranean settlements with new buildings and a highly requested camera perspective change.
Farming and Fauna
This update addresses a core layer of town management that often defines the transition from a simple outpost to a bustling rural hub: agriculture. Players can now construct farms complete with livestock, adding a new dimension to how you utilize open space on the map. In city builders, the visual transition between dense urban centers and rural outskirts is critical for immersion, and the addition of grazing animals helps sell that 19th-century aesthetic effectively.
Alongside the industrial side of animals, the update introduces a new Animal Shelter building. This facility allows for pet adoption within your town. While the mechanical impact on your economy might be lighter than the livestock farms, the ability to see domestic animals roaming your streets adds significant life to the simulation. It shifts the game from purely managing resources to managing a living, breathing community.
How does the new First-Person View change gameplay?
Strategy games often suffer from the "god complex"—you rarely see the world as your citizens do. Galaxy Grove has added a First-Person View (FPV) to the game's photo mode, allowing you to drop down from the isometric sky and walk your own streets.
This is a massive tool for players who focus on "beauty building." When you can verify sightlines from the ground level, you start designing differently. You'll likely find yourself paying more attention to decoration placement and building spacing once you can inspect the architectural flow from a pedestrian's eye view.
Update Availability
The Our Animals Update also includes various new decoration options to complement the new structures. The patch is available now on PC, so check your download queue to start integrating these new biological systems into your city planning.