Steam Workshop: Cities: Skylines. Traffic Manager: President Edition. This mod is based on the original Traffic Manager Mod by cbethax and Traffic Manager Plus. From the thread For those of u who are not sure how to solve. Download revised version of TMPE from Unsuscribe and Rescribe TMPE from Steam. I did this this morning and the mod seems back to it's pre-patch behavior.
Cities: Skylines is easily one of the best city-building games to come out in a long time. Created by indie game developer, Collasal Order, C:S allows players to build their own city, manage everything from the bus lines to the laws, and do it all with beautiful, realistic graphics. As awesome as the game is, however, there are a few things that make the game a bit tricky to play.
Some of the finer details of city managing can be difficult once your city grows to a bigger population, and you'll quickly notice things like dead bodies piling up and big lines of traffic. Thankfully, Cities Skylines comes with a built-in system for adding in game mods and plenty of amazing creators have created mods which fix some of the problems in the game, make things easier, or just make C:S more fun, overall. If you haven't played around with mods yet, or don't know which mods are essential for Cities: Skylines, this is the article for you! Installing mods on C:S is extremely simple.
You can browse for mods via the Steam Community workshop either on your or through your Steam client. Once you find a mod that you'd like to add to your game, simply click on the plus button to subscribe, and the mod will be automatically downloaded via Steam to your game.
When you launch your game, go into 'Content Manager' and open the 'Mods' tab. From there you can turn on the mod you just downloaded (or turn off mods you don't want in your game). Alternatively, if you download mods from a source other than Steam, navigate to%LOCALAPPDATA% Colossal Order Cities_Skylines. From there, there should be an Addons folder (if not, create one).
Inside there should be a Mods folder (again, create one if there's not one made already); simply drag and drop your mods (they should be packaged in folders) into this folder, then close the windows and start your game. One of the things that becomes really frustrating is buildings becoming abandoned and burning down. The game requires you to bulldoze these buildings, and if you don't the people around them will start complaining, the land value will go down, the other buildings near it will start to become abandoned, and so on. Who has time for all that when you're also trying to zone a new district, and make sure that there's enough electricity in all your areas? Thankfully, there's the Automatic Bulldoze mod, which does just what it says: automatically bulldozes all abandoned and burned buildings. Thank God; now you can finally focus on the things that really matter, like legalizing drug use in your hipster district of town. Created by the same user who made Automatic Bulldoze, Automatic Emptying is a mod that does just what its title suggests: automatically empties cemeteries and garbage facilities when they get full.
In my opinion, the fact that you have to manually empty out cemeteries and landfills when they reach capacity is a bit too much micromanaging, especially when there's so many other fun/more important things to occupy your time while playing the game. Lucky for us, this mod takes the stress out of managing your landfills and does it for you- just make sure you have adequate facilities for your trash to go into. It's awesome to build your city and see it all from a birds-eye view, but there's something infinitely better about zooming in and seeing a street view. The First-Person Camera mod lets you do just that; you can either choose a car, or even a person, to zoom into and view things from a close-up perspective.
Files are decompressed (supported zip and rar multipart archives) Text is extracted from adobe acrobat pdf or plain text documents so that you are able to perform searches inside the files.
My husband and I love to build our cities then zoom into a random cim and watch life through their eyes; follow them in their car to work, watch them walk down the streets we've built and go into the shops we've plopped down (there's no view inside of buildings, of course), watch as they enter the parks we've added, etc. It really adds to the experience, and honestly is something I'm surprised wasn't included in the vanilla gameplay. Once you really get into Cities and the Steam Workshop, chances are you'll have hundreds- if not thousands- of assets added to your game. It can be a real hassle trying to track them all down when you're ready to place them in the game, and that's when the Find It! Mod comes in handy. This helpful mod adds a custom menu/search bar in your game and allows you to search for assets (ones that came with the game/DLC as well as custom ones), roads, props, and anything else you can set down in the game.