Compare Tropico 3 (Gold Edition) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Haemimont Games. Published by Kalypso Media Digital. Released on 10/20/2009. Available on PC. Genres: Simulation, Strategy. Metacritic score: 79/100.

Run a Caribbean island dictatorship where your ego is a resource and the Cold War is your leverage. Tropico 3 Gold packs the base game and Absolute Power DLC into one vintage city-builder.

Tropico 3 is a city-builder and political management sim set on a fictional Caribbean island during the Cold War era. You play El Presidente, a ruler who must keep factions happy, balance the budget, cultivate an international reputation with both the USA and USSR, and somehow avoid being deposed, exiled, or just laughed off the island. The Gold Edition bundles in the Absolute Power DLC, which extends the campaign and adds new buildings, edicts, and presidential powers. At its core this is a supply-chain game dressed in guayaberas and satire. The economic loop is where the depth lives. You import workers, grow crops or mine resources, process them into higher-value exports, and reinvest profits into industry or tourism. Every building has staffing requirements and efficiency ratings, and watching your production chains stall because you forgot to build enough housing for skilled workers is exactly the kind of spreadsheet drama this game does well. Edicts add another layer: you can mandate compulsory military service, ban alcohol, or declare a media blackout, each with cascading effects on faction loyalty and immigration. Decision trees are not huge, but the interactions between systems are satisfying enough to warrant several restarts per scenario. For newcomers to the city-builder genre, the tutorial is adequate rather than excellent. It walks you through the basics without being condescending, but the finer economic mechanics - production ratios, budget deficits, faction thresholds - are left for the player to discover. That said, the scenarios are short enough that a failed run teaches you more in 90 minutes than most tutorials would in three hours. The AI citizens have visible opinion scores and tracked needs, so when a rebel uprising starts you can usually diagnose the exact policy that triggered it. The faction system (Militarists, Capitalists, Intellectuals, Communists, Environmentalists, and Religious) keeps you juggling priorities throughout every mission rather than solving the economy once and coasting. The weaknesses are real and tied to the game's age. The UI is dated by current standards, the pathfinding is occasionally baffling, and the late-game scenarios can feel repetitive once you have found a reliable economic formula. There is a sandbox mode, but it lacks the hooks of more modern city-builders that let you set complex win conditions or tweak starting parameters significantly. The mod ecosystem on PC exists but is modest compared to, say, Paradox titles. Multiplayer is absent entirely. If your benchmark for city-builder complexity is Frostpunk 2 or Anno 1800, Tropico 3 will feel light in the late game. What it does hold onto is charm and accessibility. The radio commentary from DJ Juanito, the personality customization of El Presidente, and the consistent satirical tone make this one of the few strategy games that is actively funny rather than just thematically winking at you. For a player who wants to understand faction management and resource chains without reading a 40-page wiki before their first session, Tropico 3 Gold is a well-paced entry point. The Absolute Power DLC adds meaningful content rather than padding, including a full separate campaign. Between the base game and DLC, you are looking at 20 to 30 hours before the formula starts to feel fully solved. Diego, Scout Team

Tropico 3 (Gold Edition)
SimulationStrategy

Tropico 3 (Gold Edition)

Oct 20, 2009Haemimont GamesKalypso Media Digital
GamerScout Says

Run a Caribbean island dictatorship where your ego is a resource and the Cold War is your leverage. Tropico 3 Gold packs the base game and Absolute Power DLC into one vintage city-builder.

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About Tropico 3 (Gold Edition)

Tropico 3 is a city-builder and political management sim set on a fictional Caribbean island during the Cold War era. You play El Presidente, a ruler who must keep factions happy, balance the budget, cultivate an international reputation with both the USA and USSR, and somehow avoid being deposed, exiled, or just laughed off the island. The Gold Edition bundles in the Absolute Power DLC, which extends the campaign and adds new buildings, edicts, and presidential powers. At its core this is a supply-chain game dressed in guayaberas and satire. The economic loop is where the depth lives. You import workers, grow crops or mine resources, process them into higher-value exports, and reinvest profits into industry or tourism. Every building has staffing requirements and efficiency ratings, and watching your production chains stall because you forgot to build enough housing for skilled workers is exactly the kind of spreadsheet drama this game does well. Edicts add another layer: you can mandate compulsory military service, ban alcohol, or declare a media blackout, each with cascading effects on faction loyalty and immigration. Decision trees are not huge, but the interactions between systems are satisfying enough to warrant several restarts per scenario. For newcomers to the city-builder genre, the tutorial is adequate rather than excellent. It walks you through the basics without being condescending, but the finer economic mechanics - production ratios, budget deficits, faction thresholds - are left for the player to discover. That said, the scenarios are short enough that a failed run teaches you more in 90 minutes than most tutorials would in three hours. The AI citizens have visible opinion scores and tracked needs, so when a rebel uprising starts you can usually diagnose the exact policy that triggered it. The faction system (Militarists, Capitalists, Intellectuals, Communists, Environmentalists, and Religious) keeps you juggling priorities throughout every mission rather than solving the economy once and coasting. The weaknesses are real and tied to the game's age. The UI is dated by current standards, the pathfinding is occasionally baffling, and the late-game scenarios can feel repetitive once you have found a reliable economic formula. There is a sandbox mode, but it lacks the hooks of more modern city-builders that let you set complex win conditions or tweak starting parameters significantly. The mod ecosystem on PC exists but is modest compared to, say, Paradox titles. Multiplayer is absent entirely. If your benchmark for city-builder complexity is Frostpunk 2 or Anno 1800, Tropico 3 will feel light in the late game. What it does hold onto is charm and accessibility. The radio commentary from DJ Juanito, the personality customization of El Presidente, and the consistent satirical tone make this one of the few strategy games that is actively funny rather than just thematically winking at you. For a player who wants to understand faction management and resource chains without reading a 40-page wiki before their first session, Tropico 3 Gold is a well-paced entry point. The Absolute Power DLC adds meaningful content rather than padding, including a full separate campaign. Between the base game and DLC, you are looking at 20 to 30 hours before the formula starts to feel fully solved. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamCity-BuilderPolitical SatireFaction ManagementSupply ChainSandbox ModeCold War SettingDLC IncludedSingle-Player Campaign

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
79
Steam
89%(1,923)

Game Info

Developer
Haemimont Games
Publisher
Kalypso Media Digital
Release Date
Oct 20, 2009

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