![]() ![]() From there, you build paths, housing, workshops, and warehouses as you would with most resource-based builders. Starting out, you have only the main building of your flying city. Setting aside the absolutely fantastical optimism of a technologically-advanced society that DIDN’T use their powers for conquest, this is a marvelous premise for a game and fits extremely well with the serene atmosphere of the gameplay. Only then, will you learn of the fate that befell those who traveled the skies before you. Striking out from the arid deserts, you must grow your aerial burg, locate the twelve scattered kingdoms, and bring them together in some semblance of the peace and prosperity they enjoyed so long ago. The original airborne kingdom left behind plans for a new flying city, and you are to command this reborn hope for the world. The golden age of the world ended, but now you have the chance to bring it all back. In the intervening years, kingdoms fell upon hard times, and retreated into isolationism. Their efforts brought peace and prosperity to all, until they vanished. ![]() Long ago, a legendary kingdom in the sky traveled the world, imparting knowledge and aid to the many kingdoms of the land. That’s what you want from the best building sims, that feeling that you cannot let go of the experience, and that is absolutely what is present here. I had to have more, had to build out a new flying city, and unite the world all over again. Six hours in this game’s serene, storybook kingdoms simply wasn’t enough for me. I know that’s a normal thing for a lot of people, but I’m very much a one-and-done gamer usually when I beat a game, I’m fully satisfied to move on to something new. When I finished the campaign in Airborne Kingdom, I did something that I never do. ![]()
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