Compare Tropico Reloaded prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by PopTop Software. Published by Kalypso Media Digital. Released on 7/26/2009. Available on PC. Genres: Simulation, Strategy.

Two classic city-builders let you rule a Caribbean island as a bumbling dictator, juggling factions, coups, and banana exports. Aged, but still sharp.

Tropico Reloaded bundles the original Tropico and its standalone expansion Tropico: Paradise Island into a single package, giving you the full first chapter of PopTop Software's tongue-in-cheek dictatorship sim. At its core this is a city-builder wrapped in a political management layer: you place farms, factories, housing, and entertainment venues, but every decision feeds into the happiness meters of eight distinct factions ranging from religious conservatives to militant communists to capitalist elites. Keep too many people happy and you run out of money. Keep too few happy and a coup ends your reign before the decade closes. That tension between solvency and approval is what makes Tropico tick, even two decades after release. For a strategy-sim specialist, the faction system is the real reason to still recommend this package. Each citizen is a simulated individual with a job, a home, a political stance, and a grievance log. When you issue an edict (say, legalising gambling or mandating military service), the game calculates approval changes across every living Tropican. It is not deep by modern standards, but it is honest about its logic, and that honesty means you can optimise. The production chains are simple by Anno or Factorio measures, but layering export economy on top of tourism on top of domestic food supply still produces genuinely interesting budget puzzles, especially on harder island maps where arable land is scarce. The tutorial is minimal by today's expectations, but the game is forgiving enough in its early missions that you learn mostly by doing. A new player willing to lose one or two short campaign scenarios will understand the core loop within an hour. The campaign structure itself is scenario-based rather than a continuous sandbox, which makes it approachable in short sessions and easy to restart when a strategy collapses. Veterans of the series should note that the AI rebels and foreign powers operate on simple scripts, so once you map the logic they stop being a real threat. The long-game challenge comes from self-imposed constraints and optimising export income, not from reactive opposition. The age of the package does show. Graphics are firmly early-2000s 3D, the UI requires some patience, and there is no widescreen support out of the box without community patches. The mod ecosystem is small compared to Paradox titles, but a handful of community fixes on the forums address the most glaring technical rough edges on modern Windows. Paradise Island adds new buildings, edicts, and a beach tourism layer that meaningfully expands the base game's economy, so the bundle is worth it over the base game alone. If you have already played Tropico 4 or 5 and are looking for the series roots, this package delivers exactly that with zero bloat. If you are a strategy newcomer curious about the genre, the low mechanical ceiling and short scenario format make it one of the gentler entry points available. Just go in knowing you are buying a well-preserved classic, not a current-gen production. Diego, Scout Team

Tropico Reloaded

Tropico Reloaded

Jul 26, 2009PopTop SoftwareKalypso Media Digital
GamerScout Says

Two classic city-builders let you rule a Caribbean island as a bumbling dictator, juggling factions, coups, and banana exports. Aged, but still sharp.

PC
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Gold
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €0.86

GamerScout Verdict

Solid classic city-builder bundle for players who want faction-driven political sim without modern complexity, if you can tolerate the dated UI.

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About Tropico Reloaded

Tropico Reloaded bundles the original Tropico and its standalone expansion Tropico: Paradise Island into a single package, giving you the full first chapter of PopTop Software's tongue-in-cheek dictatorship sim. At its core this is a city-builder wrapped in a political management layer: you place farms, factories, housing, and entertainment venues, but every decision feeds into the happiness meters of eight distinct factions ranging from religious conservatives to militant communists to capitalist elites. Keep too many people happy and you run out of money. Keep too few happy and a coup ends your reign before the decade closes. That tension between solvency and approval is what makes Tropico tick, even two decades after release. For a strategy-sim specialist, the faction system is the real reason to still recommend this package. Each citizen is a simulated individual with a job, a home, a political stance, and a grievance log. When you issue an edict (say, legalising gambling or mandating military service), the game calculates approval changes across every living Tropican. It is not deep by modern standards, but it is honest about its logic, and that honesty means you can optimise. The production chains are simple by Anno or Factorio measures, but layering export economy on top of tourism on top of domestic food supply still produces genuinely interesting budget puzzles, especially on harder island maps where arable land is scarce. The tutorial is minimal by today's expectations, but the game is forgiving enough in its early missions that you learn mostly by doing. A new player willing to lose one or two short campaign scenarios will understand the core loop within an hour. The campaign structure itself is scenario-based rather than a continuous sandbox, which makes it approachable in short sessions and easy to restart when a strategy collapses. Veterans of the series should note that the AI rebels and foreign powers operate on simple scripts, so once you map the logic they stop being a real threat. The long-game challenge comes from self-imposed constraints and optimising export income, not from reactive opposition. The age of the package does show. Graphics are firmly early-2000s 3D, the UI requires some patience, and there is no widescreen support out of the box without community patches. The mod ecosystem is small compared to Paradox titles, but a handful of community fixes on the forums address the most glaring technical rough edges on modern Windows. Paradise Island adds new buildings, edicts, and a beach tourism layer that meaningfully expands the base game's economy, so the bundle is worth it over the base game alone. If you have already played Tropico 4 or 5 and are looking for the series roots, this package delivers exactly that with zero bloat. If you are a strategy newcomer curious about the genre, the low mechanical ceiling and short scenario format make it one of the gentler entry points available. Just go in knowing you are buying a well-preserved classic, not a current-gen production.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Tags

steamCity-BuilderPolitical SimulationFaction ManagementScenario CampaignClassicEconomy OptimizationSatire

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
1.6 GHz
Memory
256 MB
Graphics
128 MB DirectX® 9 graphics card DirectX®: 9 Hard Drive: 3 GB Sound: DirectX-compatible

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
88%(970)

Game Info

Developer
PopTop Software
Publisher
Kalypso Media Digital
Release Date
Jul 26, 2009

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Frequently asked questions about Tropico Reloaded

How much does Tropico Reloaded cost?

Tropico Reloaded pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

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What platforms is Tropico Reloaded available on?

Tropico Reloaded is available on PC.

When was Tropico Reloaded released?

Tropico Reloaded was released on 26 July 2009.

Who developed Tropico Reloaded?

Tropico Reloaded was developed by PopTop Software and published by Kalypso Media Digital.