Compare Tropico 6 - Spitter (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Limbic Entertainment. Published by Kalypso Media. Released on 3/29/2019. Available on PC. Genres: Simulation, Strategy. Metacritic score: 78/100.

Run a Caribbean dictatorship across four historical eras, balancing factions, propaganda, and questionable infrastructure. City-builder meets political satire with actual strategic depth.

Tropico 6 is a construction-and-management sim wrapped in sharp political satire, where you play El Presidente ruling a small island nation through colonial, world-war, cold-war, and modern eras. Each era reshapes your available buildings, the factions demanding your attention, and the global powers breathing down your neck. The transition mechanic is the spine of the whole experience - decisions you make in the colonial period ripple forward and constrain your options decades later, which gives the campaign a satisfying cause-and-effect feel that pure sandbox city-builders often lack. The faction system is where the real decision-making lives. Capitalists, communists, religious groups, militarists, environmentalists, and intellectuals all track your policy edicts and building choices in real time. Keeping everyone above a revolt threshold while actually developing your economy requires constant attention to the numbers panel. Tourism vs. industry vs. agriculture as your primary income source is not a one-answer question - each path has multiplier buildings, trade route dependencies, and workforce bottlenecks that reward players who plan three steps ahead. The new archipelago layout, which lets you manage multiple islands connected by bridges or boats, adds genuine logistical challenge rather than just cosmetic variety. For newcomers, Tropico 6 is one of the more accessible entries in the series. The tutorial covers the basics competently, tooltips are informative without being walls of text, and the difficulty curve on standard settings gives you room to make expensive mistakes without an instant death spiral. If you have never touched a Tropico game, this is a reasonable starting point. Veterans will notice that the AI opponents introduced in multiplayer are functional but not threatening on default settings, and the late-game economy can become a bit too comfortable once your trade network matures. Modders have addressed both issues to a degree - the Steam Workshop has a healthy library of balance overhauls and new map layouts, which meaningfully extends the lifespan beyond the base campaign. On the downside, the humor lands inconsistently. Some radio announcer lines and mission objectives are genuinely funny; others repeat until you mute the audio. Path-finding for workers and vehicles remains imprecise enough that poorly designed road layouts will punish you in ways that feel more like a simulation bug than an intended obstacle. The DLC catalogue, including this Spitter pack, tends to add cosmetic content and smaller mission sets rather than systemic mechanics, so prioritize the base game experience before expanding. Bottom line: if you enjoy management sims where every policy toggle has a downstream consequence and you want something lighter in tone than Paradox grand strategy but heavier than casual builders, Tropico 6 delivers a well-structured loop with enough variables to stay interesting across multiple playthroughs. Diego, Scout Team

Tropico 6 - Spitter (DLC)
SimulationStrategy

Tropico 6 - Spitter (DLC)

Mar 29, 2019Limbic EntertainmentKalypso Media
GamerScout Says

Run a Caribbean dictatorship across four historical eras, balancing factions, propaganda, and questionable infrastructure. City-builder meets political satire with actual strategic depth.

PC
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $

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

Screenshot

About Tropico 6 - Spitter (DLC)

Tropico 6 is a construction-and-management sim wrapped in sharp political satire, where you play El Presidente ruling a small island nation through colonial, world-war, cold-war, and modern eras. Each era reshapes your available buildings, the factions demanding your attention, and the global powers breathing down your neck. The transition mechanic is the spine of the whole experience - decisions you make in the colonial period ripple forward and constrain your options decades later, which gives the campaign a satisfying cause-and-effect feel that pure sandbox city-builders often lack. The faction system is where the real decision-making lives. Capitalists, communists, religious groups, militarists, environmentalists, and intellectuals all track your policy edicts and building choices in real time. Keeping everyone above a revolt threshold while actually developing your economy requires constant attention to the numbers panel. Tourism vs. industry vs. agriculture as your primary income source is not a one-answer question - each path has multiplier buildings, trade route dependencies, and workforce bottlenecks that reward players who plan three steps ahead. The new archipelago layout, which lets you manage multiple islands connected by bridges or boats, adds genuine logistical challenge rather than just cosmetic variety. For newcomers, Tropico 6 is one of the more accessible entries in the series. The tutorial covers the basics competently, tooltips are informative without being walls of text, and the difficulty curve on standard settings gives you room to make expensive mistakes without an instant death spiral. If you have never touched a Tropico game, this is a reasonable starting point. Veterans will notice that the AI opponents introduced in multiplayer are functional but not threatening on default settings, and the late-game economy can become a bit too comfortable once your trade network matures. Modders have addressed both issues to a degree - the Steam Workshop has a healthy library of balance overhauls and new map layouts, which meaningfully extends the lifespan beyond the base campaign. On the downside, the humor lands inconsistently. Some radio announcer lines and mission objectives are genuinely funny; others repeat until you mute the audio. Path-finding for workers and vehicles remains imprecise enough that poorly designed road layouts will punish you in ways that feel more like a simulation bug than an intended obstacle. The DLC catalogue, including this Spitter pack, tends to add cosmetic content and smaller mission sets rather than systemic mechanics, so prioritize the base game experience before expanding. Bottom line: if you enjoy management sims where every policy toggle has a downstream consequence and you want something lighter in tone than Paradox grand strategy but heavier than casual builders, Tropico 6 delivers a well-structured loop with enough variables to stay interesting across multiple playthroughs. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamFaction ManagementEra ProgressionArchipelago LogisticsEdict SystemPolitical Satire SimWorkshop SupportCampaign Sandbox HybridEconomy Routing

System Requirements

System requirements for Tropico 6 - Spitter (DLC) aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
78
Steam
88%(28,997)

Game Info

Developer
Limbic Entertainment
Publisher
Kalypso Media
Release Date
Mar 29, 2019

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

More from Limbic Entertainment