Compare Tropico 5 prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Haemimont Games. Published by Kalypso Media Digital. Released on 5/23/2014. Available on PC. Genres: RPG, Simulation, Strategy. Metacritic score: 75/100.

Faction politics, a Swiss bank account, and four centuries of Caribbean dictatorship - all wrapped in enough dark comedy to keep the spreadsheet from feeling like homework.

I've sat through plenty of city-builders that mistake complexity for depth, and Tropico 5 is a rare case that lands somewhere genuinely interesting in between. You start as El Presidente in the Colonial Era, answerable to the Crown, scrambling to plant banana plantations and build a tavern for your thirsty workers before the empire loses patience. From there you advance through the World Wars, Cold War, and Modern eras, each one unlocking new buildings, edicts, and constitution amendments that shift the political ground under your feet. The era-gating means you cannot rush to oil refineries or nuclear-capable military structures from turn one, which is actually a smarter design choice than it sounds: it forces you to build an economy correctly, from raw exports to manufactured goods to tourism, before you can coast on late-game infrastructure. The faction system is where the real decision-making lives, and it is meatier than the game's laid-back Caribbean aesthetic implies. Ten factions, including Militarists, Communists, Capitalists, and the Religious bloc, each push competing demands. Satisfying one group frequently enrages another, and the constitution mechanic lets you bake those trade-offs into law permanently, which is a genuinely clever pressure valve. Your personal Swiss bank account adds a second economy to manage: siphon building revenue into it, use it to level up dynasty members or bribe your way out of a rebel crisis. Dynasty members themselves, assigned as building managers or ambassadors with traits like cost reduction or research bonuses, are more useful as resource multipliers than as characters, since they lack the personality depth the game hints at. Still, having a family member quietly boosting your mine output while another spies on a rival faction is the kind of quiet systemic texture that rewards players who actually read the tooltips. For a newcomer to the series, this is probably the clearest entry point. Diplomacy mechanics have been simplified compared to earlier titles, the campaign's first several missions function as an extended tutorial, and sandbox mode lets you ignore factions entirely if you just want to lay roads and watch your city grow organically from dirt tracks to paved boulevards as the eras tick forward. The visual transitions between periods, where buildings upgrade in place and citizen models modernize, are genuinely satisfying to watch unfold. That said, the tutorial proper is only surface-deep: advanced faction balancing, trade route management, and the research queue are largely left to trial and error, and the official patches stopped coming around 2020, leaving some AI pathing quirks and economy edge cases to the Steam Workshop community to fix via mods. Where Tropico 5 stumbles is in the areas veterans care about most. The era-gating that helps newcomers simultaneously constrains the open-ended sandbox freedom that made earlier entries so replayable. The simplified budget system strips out the granular wage and rent controls that hardcore fans used for fine economic tuning. Military combat, whenever rebel forces or foreign powers push you into it, is practically non-interactive: your units pile in with no meaningful tactical direction and the result feels bolted on rather than designed. Multiplayer for up to four players, cooperative or competitive on a shared island, is the headline addition and it genuinely works, but the underlying AI and balance issues are more visible when a human opponent can exploit them. The mod ecosystem via Steam Workshop picks up some of the slack, with GDP cap removals and AI improvements being the most cited community fixes, so if you are willing to spend ten minutes curating a small load order before your first sandbox session, the game plays noticeably better. The honest summary for a strategy-minded buyer: Tropico 5 is a competent, funny, and accessible city-builder that peaked as the best entry in the series at launch but has been partially superseded by Tropico 6. Its depth ceiling is real, and veterans who want granular agent-based simulation will hit it. For anyone new to the franchise, or anyone who just wants a low-friction afternoon of running a Caribbean dictatorship through history with a friend on co-op, the core loop holds up well even a decade on. Diego, Scout Team

Tropico 5

Tropico 5

May 23, 2014Haemimont GamesKalypso Media Digital
GamerScout Says

Faction politics, a Swiss bank account, and four centuries of Caribbean dictatorship - all wrapped in enough dark comedy to keep the spreadsheet from feeling like homework.

PC
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A

GamerScout Verdict

Best for city-builder newcomers and co-op groups; series veterans will notice the trimmed depth but the faction loop still earns its hours.

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About Tropico 5

I've sat through plenty of city-builders that mistake complexity for depth, and Tropico 5 is a rare case that lands somewhere genuinely interesting in between. You start as El Presidente in the Colonial Era, answerable to the Crown, scrambling to plant banana plantations and build a tavern for your thirsty workers before the empire loses patience. From there you advance through the World Wars, Cold War, and Modern eras, each one unlocking new buildings, edicts, and constitution amendments that shift the political ground under your feet. The era-gating means you cannot rush to oil refineries or nuclear-capable military structures from turn one, which is actually a smarter design choice than it sounds: it forces you to build an economy correctly, from raw exports to manufactured goods to tourism, before you can coast on late-game infrastructure. The faction system is where the real decision-making lives, and it is meatier than the game's laid-back Caribbean aesthetic implies. Ten factions, including Militarists, Communists, Capitalists, and the Religious bloc, each push competing demands. Satisfying one group frequently enrages another, and the constitution mechanic lets you bake those trade-offs into law permanently, which is a genuinely clever pressure valve. Your personal Swiss bank account adds a second economy to manage: siphon building revenue into it, use it to level up dynasty members or bribe your way out of a rebel crisis. Dynasty members themselves, assigned as building managers or ambassadors with traits like cost reduction or research bonuses, are more useful as resource multipliers than as characters, since they lack the personality depth the game hints at. Still, having a family member quietly boosting your mine output while another spies on a rival faction is the kind of quiet systemic texture that rewards players who actually read the tooltips. For a newcomer to the series, this is probably the clearest entry point. Diplomacy mechanics have been simplified compared to earlier titles, the campaign's first several missions function as an extended tutorial, and sandbox mode lets you ignore factions entirely if you just want to lay roads and watch your city grow organically from dirt tracks to paved boulevards as the eras tick forward. The visual transitions between periods, where buildings upgrade in place and citizen models modernize, are genuinely satisfying to watch unfold. That said, the tutorial proper is only surface-deep: advanced faction balancing, trade route management, and the research queue are largely left to trial and error, and the official patches stopped coming around 2020, leaving some AI pathing quirks and economy edge cases to the Steam Workshop community to fix via mods. Where Tropico 5 stumbles is in the areas veterans care about most. The era-gating that helps newcomers simultaneously constrains the open-ended sandbox freedom that made earlier entries so replayable. The simplified budget system strips out the granular wage and rent controls that hardcore fans used for fine economic tuning. Military combat, whenever rebel forces or foreign powers push you into it, is practically non-interactive: your units pile in with no meaningful tactical direction and the result feels bolted on rather than designed. Multiplayer for up to four players, cooperative or competitive on a shared island, is the headline addition and it genuinely works, but the underlying AI and balance issues are more visible when a human opponent can exploit them. The mod ecosystem via Steam Workshop picks up some of the slack, with GDP cap removals and AI improvements being the most cited community fixes, so if you are willing to spend ten minutes curating a small load order before your first sandbox session, the game plays noticeably better. The honest summary for a strategy-minded buyer: Tropico 5 is a competent, funny, and accessible city-builder that peaked as the best entry in the series at launch but has been partially superseded by Tropico 6. Its depth ceiling is real, and veterans who want granular agent-based simulation will hit it. For anyone new to the franchise, or anyone who just wants a low-friction afternoon of running a Caribbean dictatorship through history with a friend on co-op, the core loop holds up well even a decade on.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Tags

auto-admittedFour-Era ProgressionFaction ManagementDynasty SystemCo-op City BuilderSwiss Bank MechanicConstitution DraftingTrade FleetSandbox ModePolitical Satire Sim

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
2 GHz Dual Core CPU
Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
GeForce 400 or higher, AMD Radeon HD 4000 or higher, Intel HD 4000 or higher (DirectX 11 hardware suppo…

Recommended

Processor
2.5 GHz Quad Core CPU
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
GeForce 500 or higher, AMD Radeon HD 5000 or higher
DirectX
Version 11
Network
Broadband Inte…

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
75
Steam
79%(14,383)

Game Info

Developer
Haemimont Games
Publisher
Kalypso Media Digital
Release Date
May 23, 2014

Features

Single-playerMultiplayerCo-opCross Platform MultiplayerSteam AchievementsSteam Trading CardsSteam WorkshopSteam Cloud+2 more

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What platforms is Tropico 5 available on?

Tropico 5 is available on PC.

When was Tropico 5 released?

Tropico 5 was released on 23 May 2014.

Who developed Tropico 5?

Tropico 5 was developed by Haemimont Games and published by Kalypso Media Digital.

Is Tropico 5 worth buying?

Tropico 5 holds a Metacritic score of 75/100, making it one of the standout RPG titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.