After playing it for few hours, it's fun for a while and shows a lot of potential. Right now it's very short play value sadly, productions chains are neat to tinker with but that's the only part of the game I would consider "finished" (though it could use additional expansion). There's very short micro campaign you get to play through that shows you the basics that's pretty cool form of a tutorial but really could use further expansion, maybe into proper full on campaign for the game. It teases a lot of interesting interactions through places like army base, guerrilla camp, airport as well as missions for individual cartel members but rn none are accessible. Overall, try it out and wait for full release, this game could be great.
Fun cartel fact: One of the ways in which they busted the Sinaloa cartel was through their spending $2,500 per month on elastic bands. The bands were used to hold together the "bricks" of money they were making and dealing with. They had so much cash that it required entire unit blocks to be rented out, in order to store it, and their stacks often reached the ceilings of the apartments!
1.0 released today!!
i dont think this is nulled.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5jy9lJNpejg&feature=emb_title&ab_channel=tinyBuildGAMES
Right now it's very short play value sadly, productions chains are neat to tinker with but that's the only part of the game I would consider "finished" (though it could use additional expansion). There's very short micro campaign you get to play through that shows you the basics that's pretty cool form of a tutorial but really could use further expansion, maybe into proper full on campaign for the game. It teases a lot of interesting interactions through places like army base, guerrilla camp, airport as well as missions for individual cartel members but rn none are accessible.
Overall, try it out and wait for full release, this game could be great.
One of the ways in which they busted the Sinaloa cartel was through their spending $2,500 per month on elastic bands. The bands were used to hold together the "bricks" of money they were making and dealing with. They had so much cash that it required entire unit blocks to be rented out, in order to store it, and their stacks often reached the ceilings of the apartments!