The single-player campaign puts you in charge of pre-built parks with a number of challenges. There are three game modes on offer that give you different goals to accomplish, or none. There’s a decent tutorial if you need it, otherwise, you can jump right into the action and start managing your park. You’re getting all the game modes, all the options (minus the PC specific stuff) and all the fun. Planet Coaster offers up everything that’s found in the PC version of the game. I was a little poorly when this review came around, so having a game that didn’t require quick reflexes was a godsend, as was the ability to mostly play with just one hand. Other times, I just wanted to lie on the couch covered in my duvet with the mouse resting on my leg. It’s nice to have the option, though, and I found myself flitting between the two different control options as and when I needed it. So I was afforded the luxury of playing with a mouse and keyboard if I wanted to, but Jason preferred to play with the sexy DualSense controller. Full disclaimer, mind you, I played the game on Xbox Series S, while my colleague Jason played on PS4 and PS5. Planet Coaster: Console Edition is, as the name suggests, a port of the popular PC game. Actually, for the sake of everybody, let’s hope that doesn’t happen… Not in real life, mind you, but who knows… Maybe I’ll get to build a real-life theme park one day. It’s mostly true, isn’t it? The irony is not lost on me, then, that one of my favourite types of games are business management games, specifically, theme park games, but I do like to dabble in others, too.Įver since I was thrown a copy of Theme Park for the PS1 all those years ago, I’ve had a soft spot for building theme parks and making fat stacks. Me and Mrs typically spend our evenings talking rubbish, complaining about the wrongs in the world, and we always seem to settle on Big Business as being the source of all evil on our wonderful planet.
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