Cities: Skylines - Downtown Radio (DLC)
Downtown Radio adds a curated in-game music station to Cities: Skylines, piping chill urban beats straight into your city-building sessions without leaving the game.
Compare Prices(0 stores)
Loading prices...
We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.
Screenshots & Media

About Cities: Skylines - Downtown Radio (DLC)
Let's be clear about what Downtown Radio actually is: a music DLC, not a gameplay expansion. There are no new roads, no zoning tools, no policy sliders. What you get is a licensed radio station that plays inside Cities: Skylines, giving your city-planning marathons a consistent audio backdrop without alt-tabbing to a streaming service. If you were hoping for budget mechanics or transit overhauls, look elsewhere. If you want your highway interchanges scored to something other than silence, read on. The station itself leans toward downtempo, jazz-adjacent, and ambient urban tracks, which fits the mood of watching residential demand graphs tick upward at 2 AM. The selection is modest in track count, and after a few hundred hours of play you will notice the rotation cycling. That is the honest ceiling of this DLC: it is background furniture, functional and pleasant, but it does not grow with your library the way a Spotify playlist would. Players who already pipe external audio into their sessions will find zero reason to open their wallet here. From a value-assessment standpoint, Downtown Radio makes the most sense as part of a bundle pickup rather than a standalone purchase. Cities: Skylines itself sits at an 85 on Metacritic and carries 93% positive Steam reviews across a massive sample size, so the base game is the obvious priority. The radio DLC is a comfort feature, not a depth feature. It does nothing for the late-game challenge of managing traffic throughput, pollution zoning, or the public-transit death spirals that define expert play. For newcomers to city builders, the base game remains one of the more accessible modern entries in the genre despite its depth. The radio DLC, if bundled cheaply, adds a small layer of immersion that can make those first tentative residential grids feel more alive. Veteran players with 500-plus hours probably have their own audio setup locked in and will shrug at this entirely. The mod ecosystem around Cities: Skylines is enormous, and there are community-built audio and radio mods that compete with or exceed what this DLC offers for free, which is worth knowing before you commit. Bottom line: Downtown Radio is a minor quality-of-life addition that does its one job adequately. It is not the DLC you prioritize, but it is not a cynical cash grab either. Treat it like a coaster you pick up when it is on sale. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Reviews & Ratings
Game Info
- Developer
- Colossal Order
- Publisher
- Paradox Interactive
- Release Date
- Mar 10, 2015