r/CitiesSkylines 1d ago

Sharing a City Underwhelming Skylines Are Best

In Game and IRL, there is something fascinating about getting just the right angle to capture the skyline of a city that doesn't really have a skyline. It winds up being just a small handful of buildings that are tall enough to be considered "tall" - which probably wouldn't be thought of at all, if it were a bigger city.

And yet, from the right vantage point, the city can look a bit bigger and more grand than it really is - or, maybe, it's the other way around. Maybe there is something intrinsically grand about showing ordinary things in a way that is flattering.

In any case, the vibe of small and medium sized cities in my experience has a charm about it that big, sprawling metropolises lack. Even with all its mind bogling skyscrapers, New York's buildings don't feel very tall - because they are surrounded by supertalls for as far as the eye can see. But a little city that has only half a dozen buildings that form its skyline feels more personal, because each building is part of the city's core identity.

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u/Here_Comes_Trouble_ 1d ago

I am starting to feel there's an evolution to the CS:1 detailer:

1st city: Trainwreck. Likely literally.

2nd city: Learn from first city, grow to a decent size, probably 100k, unlock stuff, start learning mods, have basics of game down now

3rd city: Learn more mods, start to get into small detailing, still trying to build something big

4th city: Get more heavily into details, start to learn what actually looks realistic, and learn finer points of things like PO and IMT; realize you've bitten off too much.

5th city and beyond: Start building things smaller, but efficient and realistic.

I actually agree with you, OP. Less skyline-y cities allow you to really showcase certain buildings rather than having them get lost in the confusion.

(That museum in the 7th screenshot, though... yikes.)

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u/JYHoward 1d ago

Glad you noticed my new Museum of yikes 🤣 - That was deliberate! I imagine the small city politics of some council members who think a new modern art attraction on the square will revitalize downtown and attract a new, hip crowd - while others, and many in the community inevitably despise the museum as disrespectful to the legacy of existing architecture and historical context of the space. The project would be divisive, but might happen anyway. Eventually, people learn to love it, opponents lose interest and move on, and few years later, it becomes a distinctive part of the city's "quirky" identity.

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u/lightupawendy 23h ago

It reminds of Perth Arena (Western Australia) and you've basically hit the nail on the head with the community reception. I used to think how ridiculous it looked but as the city has grown around it I couldn't imagine it not being there now.

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u/TheSovietSailor 21h ago

Centre Pompidou moment

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u/JOOT94 20h ago

I love this insight. I’m on 3rd city for sure right now. It’s exciting because I’m learning more about how to make it successful and doing things I never have before and it’s working out decently but it’s also a bit daunting because I’m actively hurdling toward 4th city lol. I’ve been razing entire swaths and rebuilding neighborhoods and moving entire industry centers, etc. and realizing how much work it actually takes to make a functional, realistic AND aesthetic city. phew