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Cities: Skylines 2 kills off its (virtual) landlords to save players from the cruelty of soaring rent prices

Cities: Skylines 2 has—or rather, had—a rent problem. As evidenced by even the briefest of searches on the game's subreddit, players kept bumping into the same systemic nightmare time and time again: The rent is too damn high.

Oof, if that doesn't hit close to home. Just look at the real-world UK right now, for example, which is in the midst of a renting crisis—with the Office of National Statistics reporting that rent has increased by 9 percent over 12 months, the biggest pricing bump since it started tracking increases in 2015. The US isn't doing much better, either.

Depending on who you ask, the reasons vary: Supply simply isn't meeting demand, or the poor landlords are facing all sorts of rising costs, or, as Generation Rent's Ben Twomey points out for The Independent, «landlords are raising the rent just because their tenants have no choice but to pay these prices.» Pick your poison—housing machine's broke either way.

Funnily enough, much of the advice given by other Cities: Skylines 2 players tracks with the real-world problem: «Zone more smaller sized homes—it's like what's happening in the US. There are no starter homes left in and around major cities,» writes one player on the game's subreddit.

Another player adds in a separate thread: «If the economy is healthy and tax rates are set appropriately, most cims [what City: Skylines 2 calls civilians] will navigate low rent signs and be OK,» ah, yeah. Healthy economy. Appropriate taxes. That sounds nice. «In the end, cims need to earn income and taxes need to be low enough for them to be able to stay in the building. It's a systemic problem with low density neighbourhoods which matches real life as well. Some people buy homes they just can't afford to live in.»

The icons flooding player's cities have become so irritating, in fact, that City: Skylines 2 developer Colossal Order has had to step in with two hilariously contradictory measures that should, hopefully, solve the problem of rent prices. In a videogame,

Read more on pcgamer.com