Compare El Dorado: The Golden City Builder prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Hobo Bunch. Published by Gameparic. Released on 6/17/2024. Available on PC. Genres: Indie, Simulation, Strategy.

A Mesoamerican city-builder with a genuinely interesting gods-and-sacrifice hook, undercut by shallow mechanics, poor performance, and a community that's voted mostly negative at launch.

My spreadsheet instincts told me to be excited: a Yucatan-peninsula city-builder where you manage resource chains, zone residential and production districts, run military expeditions against rival tribes, AND balance the wrath of gods through ritual sacrifice at temples? That pitch lands on paper. The execution, unfortunately, does not hold up to the same scrutiny. El Dorado: The Golden City Builder from Hobo Bunch sits at a mostly negative reception on Steam, and after working through its systems, the reasons are not hard to pin down. The structural bones are familiar to anyone who has logged time in colony sims. You start from a humble settlement and expand outward, placing sawmills, gatherer's huts, water-carrier posts, residential housing, barracks, and temples across a draw-road grid. The building placement is intuitive enough, and the zone-planning side of things has some mild satisfaction when supply chains click together. The gods-and-omens mechanic is the one genuinely original layer: neglect your temples and the deities send cataclysms that interrupt your production; keep a priest busy with sacrifices and festivals and you gain divine buffs to farm yields and military capability. In theory, that creates a meaningful second resource track running parallel to your food-and-gold loop. In practice, the sacrifice cycle becomes repetitive quickly, and the omens rarely escalate into genuinely dramatic crises that force hard decisions. The deeper problem is that the mechanics stay shallow well past the point where depth should arrive. There is no real logistical overview panel, which means tracking where your wood or food is bottlenecking requires hunting visually across the map rather than reading a supply dashboard. Worker pathfinding has been flagged repeatedly by players as unreliable, with units getting stuck on roads or spinning in place after building reassignments. Performance is a separate concern: the game is built in Unity and runs surprisingly poorly even on mid-range hardware, with reports of low framerates at modest settings and significant RAM consumption. For a city-builder at this scale and visual fidelity, that is a difficult trade-off to justify. The military side, where you send expeditions to plunder rival tribes and acquire resources and slaves for city development, is handled at arm's length rather than as a direct RTS engagement, but it also lacks the diplomatic texture that would make the faction layer feel alive. The setting itself deserves credit for being underexplored in the genre. Mayan-adjacent aesthetics with jungle terrain, temples, shrines, and maize fields make for a visually distinct board to play on, and the ambient audio fits the theme reasonably well. But the progression structure is thin: there is no strong narrative thread connecting your city milestones, and the campaign functions more like a structured sandbox without clear escalation of stakes. Players who came in hoping for something along the lines of Anno or Banished set in Mesoamerica will find El Dorado short on the micro-management depth that makes those games compelling. The tutorial also earns criticism for being vague on core mechanics at a point in the run where clarity matters most. Who might still find value here? Extremely patient genre completionists who want every Mesoamerican city-builder in existence, and players who genuinely enjoy the aesthetic enough to tolerate the rough edges. Everyone else, especially anyone prioritising decision-making depth or reliable technical performance, should treat this as a lower-priority wishlist entry until meaningful patches demonstrate that the worker AI, performance, and logistical toolset have been addressed. Diego, Scout Team

El Dorado: The Golden City Builder
IndieSimulationStrategy

El Dorado: The Golden City Builder

Jun 17, 2024Hobo BunchGameparic
GamerScout Says

A Mesoamerican city-builder with a genuinely interesting gods-and-sacrifice hook, undercut by shallow mechanics, poor performance, and a community that's voted mostly negative at launch.

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About El Dorado: The Golden City Builder

My spreadsheet instincts told me to be excited: a Yucatan-peninsula city-builder where you manage resource chains, zone residential and production districts, run military expeditions against rival tribes, AND balance the wrath of gods through ritual sacrifice at temples? That pitch lands on paper. The execution, unfortunately, does not hold up to the same scrutiny. El Dorado: The Golden City Builder from Hobo Bunch sits at a mostly negative reception on Steam, and after working through its systems, the reasons are not hard to pin down. The structural bones are familiar to anyone who has logged time in colony sims. You start from a humble settlement and expand outward, placing sawmills, gatherer's huts, water-carrier posts, residential housing, barracks, and temples across a draw-road grid. The building placement is intuitive enough, and the zone-planning side of things has some mild satisfaction when supply chains click together. The gods-and-omens mechanic is the one genuinely original layer: neglect your temples and the deities send cataclysms that interrupt your production; keep a priest busy with sacrifices and festivals and you gain divine buffs to farm yields and military capability. In theory, that creates a meaningful second resource track running parallel to your food-and-gold loop. In practice, the sacrifice cycle becomes repetitive quickly, and the omens rarely escalate into genuinely dramatic crises that force hard decisions. The deeper problem is that the mechanics stay shallow well past the point where depth should arrive. There is no real logistical overview panel, which means tracking where your wood or food is bottlenecking requires hunting visually across the map rather than reading a supply dashboard. Worker pathfinding has been flagged repeatedly by players as unreliable, with units getting stuck on roads or spinning in place after building reassignments. Performance is a separate concern: the game is built in Unity and runs surprisingly poorly even on mid-range hardware, with reports of low framerates at modest settings and significant RAM consumption. For a city-builder at this scale and visual fidelity, that is a difficult trade-off to justify. The military side, where you send expeditions to plunder rival tribes and acquire resources and slaves for city development, is handled at arm's length rather than as a direct RTS engagement, but it also lacks the diplomatic texture that would make the faction layer feel alive. The setting itself deserves credit for being underexplored in the genre. Mayan-adjacent aesthetics with jungle terrain, temples, shrines, and maize fields make for a visually distinct board to play on, and the ambient audio fits the theme reasonably well. But the progression structure is thin: there is no strong narrative thread connecting your city milestones, and the campaign functions more like a structured sandbox without clear escalation of stakes. Players who came in hoping for something along the lines of Anno or Banished set in Mesoamerica will find El Dorado short on the micro-management depth that makes those games compelling. The tutorial also earns criticism for being vague on core mechanics at a point in the run where clarity matters most. Who might still find value here? Extremely patient genre completionists who want every Mesoamerican city-builder in existence, and players who genuinely enjoy the aesthetic enough to tolerate the rough edges. Everyone else, especially anyone prioritising decision-making depth or reliable technical performance, should treat this as a lower-priority wishlist entry until meaningful patches demonstrate that the worker AI, performance, and logistical toolset have been addressed. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstier:indieGod GameMesoamerican SettingSacrifice MechanicMilitary ExpeditionsZone PlanningWorker Pathfinding IssuesUnity EngineTribal Conquest

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Playable

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 8.1 64bit / Windows 10 64bit
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
20 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GTX 960 4GB or AMD Radeon RX 460 4GB
Processor
Intel Core i5-4590 or AMD Ryzen 3 1200
Sound Card
DirectX Compatible Sound Device
Additional Notes
SSD recommended

Recommended

OS
Windows 8.1 64bit / Windows 10 64bit
Memory
16 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
20 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GTX 1080 8GB or AMD Radeon RX 590 8GB
Processor
Intel Core i7-8700 or AMD Ryzen 5 3600
Sound Card
DirectX Compatible Sound Device
Additional Notes
SSD recommended

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
Hobo Bunch
Publisher
Gameparic
Release Date
Jun 17, 2024

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El Dorado: The Golden City Builder is available on PC.

When was El Dorado: The Golden City Builder released?

El Dorado: The Golden City Builder was released on 17 June 2024.

Who developed El Dorado: The Golden City Builder?

El Dorado: The Golden City Builder was developed by Hobo Bunch and published by Gameparic.