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Cosy builder Town to City feels like a lovely autumnal treat, but honestly I'm just having fun planting flowers
Game Reviews

Cosy builder Town to City feels like a lovely autumnal treat, but honestly I’m just having fun planting flowers

by admin September 21, 2025


I knew Town to City had ensnared me in its nefarious trap the moment it told me I could customise individual window boxes. Yes, this early access city builder is one of those games, seemingly aimed specifically at weirdos like me whose idea of bliss is hours spent in a serene reverie of fastidious path-laying and flower-planting, all in the name of aesthetic perfection. And if you count yourself in that number, Town to City might just be the ideal retreat as the cold autumnal nights draw in.

Town to City

  • Developer: Galaxy Grove
  • Publisher: Kwalee
  • Platform: Played on PC
  • Availability: Out now on Steam

If Town to City seems familiar, it may be because it’s a follow-up to developer Galaxy Grove’s equally minimalist (and equally voxelly) Station to Station. As with that earlier game, Town to City slides into that inescapable subgenre of ‘cosy’, which – for those of you who haven’t already succumbed to the allure of a digital turnip – essentially means it’s designed to be soothingly friction-free.

Cosy games tend to be a little impervious to standard criticism, given they’re more about the vibes rather than any clever mechanical sophistication, and that’s the case again with Town to City. Its campaign (there’s also sandbox mode with various tweakable parameters) unfolds across a well-worn loop of upgrades and expansion – one that’s pleasantly propulsive but otherwise fairly unremarkable.

Town to City launch trailer.Watch on YouTube

Essentially, citizens produce goods; goods increase happiness; the happier your citizens are, the more will move to your town. More citizens means more goods, means more people, until you’ve crossed a threshold that allows you to turn your dwelling into a hamlet into a village and so on, unlocking new buildings and customisation options each time.

It’s familiar stuff, and Town to City streamlines the formula down to the absolute essentials. There’re a few wrinkles, mind, but these ultimately boil down to space management – don’t expect to see anything like cross-border trade agreements or complex production chains here. Plop some buildings down to satisfy early demand – a couple of single-story houses, perhaps, or a vegetable stall – and it won’t be long before you’ve built yourself into a corner, and the only way to continue catering to your citizens’ ever-escalating whims is a town redesign. But that’s fine! Really, design is what Town to City is all about. Think of it more as a beautification tool with a few simple progression knobs on, and its appeal is immediately clear.

A plan comes together! | Image credit: Eurogamer/Galaxy Grove

Town to City’s boxy voxel aesthetic might look restrictive, but its grid-free construction system – similar to the excellent, and more mechanically complex, Foundation – means your grand expansion plans can unfold in satisfyingly organic ways. Each of the five bucolic maps included in Town to City’s early access release are intended to invoke a sort of peaceful Mediterranean air, and by the time you’ve delved deep into its toybox of customisation options, and your creations are bustling with life, those boxy visuals pack in a surprising amount of charm.

Kudos, too, for a construction tool kit that manages to feel creatively flexible without ever being overwhelming. Sure, I’m already assembling a mental wishlist of additions I’d love to see – a path smoothing tool to counter my wobbly mouse hand, for instance – but this is still in early access development, after all. And honestly, I’ve been having a genuinely lovely time – to the tune of far too many hours, frankly – building my beautiful boxy dioramas, lost in a blissful daze of quaint market squares, picturesque parks around crystalline lakes, and palatial residences high on hills. And the well-featured camera tool has sucked up a decent amount of my time too.

Photo mode is pretty compelling too. | Image credit: Eurogamer/Galaxy Grove

Town to City might be in early access, but it already feels incredibly robust. Galaxy Grove seems to agree, too, given its Steam page suggests future updates will be more about refinement (and animals!) than dramatic reinvention. So if you’re also the kind of person to get an involuntary quiver at the merest mention of customisable window boxes, this’ll almost certainly be right for you. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got some flowers to stick in the ground.



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September 21, 2025 0 comments
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"GTA for kids" has arrived on Xbox Game Pass, and it's a delightful example of how to treat a younger audience with respect
Game Updates

“GTA for kids” has arrived on Xbox Game Pass, and it’s a delightful example of how to treat a younger audience with respect

by admin September 20, 2025


“Kids are quite discerning, actually,” says someone who has never really spent any time with kids, and perhaps doesn’t even know what a child is. My experience with kids has revealed that, no, they aren’t discerning at all. They are happy to watch absolute drivel, demand to be bought ‘toys’ that are little more than sludge, and dress in whatever triple-stained clothes they’ve been wearing for the last week. So, when a game is labelled as an imitation of a huge franchise, but “for kids”, my quality alarm sounds and I expect the worst.

Wobbly Life

Enter Wobbly Life, launched into early access on Steam five years ago, and a year later on Xbox. It’s technically a “GTA for kids”, yes, if you simply don’t want to use many words due to being chronically lazy or rushed – but this would actually be doing a quite wonderful game a massive injustice. It’s essentially an open, knockabout world of activities and exploration, playable by up to four players cooperatively, with a focus squarely on physics, laughs and fun.

As a ‘gamer’ parent (I do know quite a lot about video games, contrary to what people on message boards might say) to an 11-year-old and a four-year-old, I’m immediately narked when a game designed for kids fails to give that audience an ounce of respect. Yes, games for young players should be simpler to grasp, but that’s no excuse to make them buggy, dull, tiresome messes. A lot of these games feel like they are exploiting loved brands for a quick buck, but Wobbly Life couldn’t be trying harder to offer an experience that keeps on delivering.

Over the five years since its initial early access release Wobbly Life has seen update after update, adding new areas, new jobs, new missions, new vehicles, new activities… new pretty much everything. Now on its 1.0 release, on Game Pass (as well as all major platforms), I honestly don’t think there is a better game for kids to mess around with. Part job sim, part life sim, part go into space sim (thanks to the latest update), you might one moment be taking a job delivering newspapers via a nifty truck equipped with a paper shooter, then buying that new house you’ve always dreamed of, then jetting off into space to see what adventures await.

I’ve watched my son play Wobbly Life aged seven to 11, and this game simply has the juice. What this juice is made of is hard to pinpoint, but I think the key ingredient is a commitment to quality. None of the activities, missions, or jobs here are detailed enough to stand on their own, but they do just enough and let kids fill in the blanks. Kids are great at this (my daughter likes to pretend she is an assortment of doughs, then jumps into an invisible oven to bake, the only real-life prop being the dings I make to signify the time is up). You can be a farmer here, not like in Farming Sim, but how a child sees being a farmer, and it’s perfect.

While the big hitters on Roblox bring in an obscene number of players, have you actually seen what the majority of these games are like? Busywork and clicking with the only goal being to accrue enough currency to buy the next macguffin, to allow you to do even more busywork and clicking to buy that same mcguffin, but bigger. The actual gameplay within these games is so narrow it simply funnels kids down these content tunnels, always offering a new carrot tied to an increasingly dazzling stick, with the added peril of premium currency to shortcut that drudgery.

The Space Update is just the latest in what has been a constant stream of big additions to the game. | Image credit: RubberBandGames

Wobbly Life doesn’t care about what players are doing or how. Developer RubberBandGames just keeps on throwing more and more toys into the playpen, then sits back and lets the kids get on with it. I’ve heard my son squeal with joy while playing (often online with friends), and the core gameplay is simple enough for any family member to jump in and have a good time. The fact that this game has 14,500 English reviews on Steam and is currently sat on “Overwhelmingly Positive” says it all.

If there’s any justice in the world of game development (and given the state of job security in this industry, I am leaning towards there not being any), RubberBandGames received a bumper-sized truck full of cash for putting its wonderful game on Game Pass. Beyond that, games like this deserve just as much praise as the headline-grabbers, the triple-As, and the financial quarter heroes. I don’t want my kids playing slop where the ‘content’ is nothing more than a road to profit. Instead, I’ve got four years of brilliant memories tied to Wobbly Life, a game with heart that you don’t need to buy in a store.

A copy of Wobbly Life was purchased by the author.



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September 20, 2025 0 comments
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Gaming Gear

Samsung’s very expensive Family Hub fridges will now treat you to ads on their displays

by admin September 18, 2025


If you’ve just shelled out thousands of dollars on one of Samsung’s smart fridges, you’d be forgiven for expecting it to leave you alone, rather than encouraging you to spend even more money. But that is no longer the case — following a recent update, you’ll start seeing ads on the fridge’s display.

According to Android Authority, the new software update is being rolled out to Samsung’s Family Hub refrigerators in the US, and will now display ads and promotions while the display is idle. In a statement to the outlet, Samsung confirmed that it’s conducting a pilot program as part of its commitment to (brace yourselves for this one) “enhancing every day value for our home appliance customers.”

The Cover Screen on which ads show up appears when a refrigerator is not displaying something else, such as Samsung’s Art Mode or a photo album. Samsung told Android Authority that advertising won’t appear when one of these modes is active, adding that specific ads can also be dismissed and won’t appear again while the campaign is running.

What the statement doesn’t make clear is whether advertising can be turned off altogether, which again, seems like a reasonable option given that you can expect to pay anything between $1,800 and $3,500 for a Family Hub-equipped fridge. But it doesn’t appear to be possible while the pilot period is live. It also isn’t clear if any specific models are omitted from the testing.

Back in April, Samsung’s head of R&D for digital appliances, Jeong Seung Moon, told The Verge that at that time the company had no plans to bring ads to its smart home displays, but in the case of its refrigerators it appears to have changed its mind pretty quickly.



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September 18, 2025 0 comments
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'Trick 'r Treat' is Coming Back to Theaters Next Month
Product Reviews

‘Trick ‘r Treat’ is Coming Back to Theaters Next Month

by admin September 15, 2025


After finally hitting the big screen for everyone for the first time a few years ago, Trick r’ Treat will be back in theaters October 14 and 16.

According to a press release from Fathom Entertainment, the horror flick will get a 4K restoration and a little bonus in the form of a 4K restoration for director Mike Dougherty’s Season’s Greetings short. The 1996 video is an origin for the final film and will be part of a look back by Dougherty through several Halloween-specific memories that led to the creation of the film’s rule-breaking trick-or-treater, Sam.

“Horror fans have long been thirsting for Trick ‘r Treat to take its rightful place back on the big screen and in cinemas nationwide,” said Fathom’s Tom Lucas. “We’re thrilled to bring this classic horror film back in theaters in sparkling 4K with our partners just in time for Halloween. A stellar cast helps make Trick ‘r Treat a frightening cinematic experience fans will not want to miss!”

First shown at film festivals in 2007, Trick ‘r Treat has been a cult classic since it hit DVDs back in 2009. Its generally positive reception has led to some rumblings of Dougherty by a sequel, but the Hollywood strikes and his work on the Monsterverse movies have made progress on it slow. Until that day comes, rewatching the original is still a fine spooky season tradition—especially on the big screen.

Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.



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September 15, 2025 0 comments
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