I Banned Cars From Houston and Ruined Cities Skylines II

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Come be part of the epic adventure of spending 3 hours trying to figure out which one of your 300 mods is breaking your save!

AdamSomething
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I don't know what is more unlikely, snow in southern Texas or walkability there

the_pinkerton
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20% game review
60% rant about the Hungarian railway
15% "f*ck cars, make cities walkable again"
5% making fun of the far-right twitter degens

100% perfection

we need more let's plays like this!

arcrimeaball
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I love how he used sponsored material to just mostly complain about Hungary's government and railway <3

Hasus
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the two-lane highway being named the minority evictor is a nice touch

fatsplz
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You know your countrys railway is bad when Deutsche Bahn is the positive example

Realkeepa-etvo
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I just wish public officials where I live remembered that when limiting car access you need to increase public transit availability

Joao-kiwv
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Adam just absolutely not holding back and naming the two main highway sections "The Minority Evictor" and "Fist of R. Moses" already makes this video legendary

guardianofthehill
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Kinda want a Cities Skylines 2 series of just you building an efficient city and explaining why you chose particular choices. Probably not your kind of content, but I would genuinely love to see one.

Pokanika
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You could also make Dubai with a sewage system

ramiqcom
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Renaming the twitter pastiche Y is hilarious, they should totally do that

Soguwe
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Houston city planners when not told to build 10 lane highways and parking lots: 😯

Vakowski
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Im danish, and i can confirm that we are primative cavemen that hunt our food with sticks

Bohrum
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Game doesn't have bicycles which is quite insane as its a basic feature.

wile
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This is the most politicized game review I’ve ever seen, and I am glad to be here for it.

ImWriiight
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2:07 As a person who has lived in Denmark her whole life, I like that I don't have waste money on a car and license to get where I need to. Surprise, but it's actually really nice to have all necessities within a short, walkable distance, and being able to get everywhere else with public transportation and/or bike

Mathilde_Bruhn
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Ambassador part really surprised me, always thought they would have quite a strong connection and understanding of a country they work in

MrMediator
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I'd 100% watch you do a full lets play series of you turning a city into the most car free utopia possible (that he game would allow you to make)...obviously will political and social rants peppered throughout.

ZachBobBob
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Trust Adam Something to turn a fun sponsored City Skylines project into a scathing critique of Hungarian and Serbian corruption and the dangers of Chinese loans. Literally stunned rn.

EternalShadow
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They didn't say, but the US Embassy to Denmark is about a hundred meters from Østerport, one of the key stations in downtown Copenhagen. It is a station for the S-trains, metro, and regional trains, as well as the train to Sweden. Many buses also stop there. If the US ambassador's driver was riding for an hour in the snow rather than taking the train, that was a choice.

As a real-life example, I live a bit outside of kbh. and it would take me about 45 minutes to get to the US embassy by bus and train. During most of it, I would be sitting in a climate controlled train watching a show or reading a book.

If I chose to ride to the embassy, Google predicts it would take an hour and a half, so we can conclude the the driver lives closer to the embassy than I do, so the commute by public transportation would take less time.

But, yeah, one of the issues is also that Americans view doing anything that isn't climate controlled as a nightmare. We've worked ourselves into a tizzy about getting hit with a single drop of rain or the tinest bit of sweat. Many Americans are baffled that my family don't have a car. They'll say things like, "How do you get your groceries?" And I'll say, "I have a bike trailer." Then they ask about the snow, and I say that bike lanes in Denmark are given priority to be de-iced, the same priority as the motorways, so it's like asking how do you drive when it snows. Then they ask what happens when I'm sick or whatever, and I tell them that I can also get groceries delivered, and that the bike trailer also fits on my wife's bike. It is clear that many of them don't want to believe that it is possible to live without a car in a modern, industrialized city.

kitbradley