I cant seem to get rid of the high rent tags on my residential and industrial sectors. For residential Ive tried adding low cost housing but i dont know what to try with industrial.

👁️👄👁️
link
fedilink
English
161Y

Eat the land lords

@[email protected]
creator
link
fedilink
English
41Y

I am the landlord

purplexed
link
fedilink
English
11Y

Do you prefer salt and pepper or a nice marinade?

Billegh
link
fedilink
English
21Y

I’m waiting… ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)

@[email protected]
link
fedilink
English
61Y

Have you raised taxes? How is your demand for those sectors? I have found if you have high demand and aren’t building, it pushes up the rent for them instead - more demand = increased rent. Low cost equivalent won’t make a difference if the demand is for say low density instead.

If I recall correctly this is also the “trick” to get demand increasing for medium and high density. If low remains high rent / in huge demand, eventually it prices a lot out and they start demanding medium or high instead

@[email protected]
creator
link
fedilink
English
21Y

I did fiddle with the taxes but im not really sure how I should allocate. I cant tax by density, only by education.

@[email protected]
link
fedilink
English
21Y

Yeah I meant just taxes generally for residential etc. You have lowered them, which should alleviate some amount of it.

Rent goes up due to demand and how “nice” the area is, access to healthcare etc. You should be able to drop rent simply by building more of that density residential. The same with just building more industrial

@[email protected]
link
fedilink
English
21Y

Wait a second, they take how nice the area is into account for rent? Does this mean I could also try to deal with too high rents in a given part of my city by like, removing the local park?

@[email protected]
link
fedilink
English
21Y

A few references exist but heres one https://www.radiotimes.com/technology/gaming/cities-skylines-2-high-rent/

Remove services, thereby lowering land values in the area - if you get rid of nearby conveniences, a property will lose value. Simple!

Another poster said you could pollute the area, too.

@[email protected]
link
fedilink
English
71Y

I’ve never played this game, but I am both amused and horrified by the notion of tax rate depending on education level.

@[email protected]
creator
link
fedilink
English
21Y

The biggest challenge I face is getting people to go to elementary school. I think 15% of the population is uneducated and 60% is well educated.

@[email protected]
link
fedilink
English
11Y

Can’t you make it illegal not to, like in the USA?

@[email protected]
creator
link
fedilink
English
41Y

I think the problem is that they try and drive to school but they get stuck in traffic for a week. Traffic flow in the city is really bad. I’m working on public transport networks now.

I play this game and was horrified when I saw that. Seems like a mistake. It’s really taxing them by income level, as education is what determines income level.

@[email protected]
link
fedilink
English
81Y

I suspect it might be meant as a proxy for tax brackets based on income, I don’t think (could be wrong), that the game keeps track of each citizen’s salary, but they want to represent the phenomenon of better paying jobs generally requiring more education, and it does track education level

@[email protected]
link
fedilink
English
261Y

You can just ignore it, it didn’t have an impact on my city. Buildings didn’t get abandoned nor did the demand for business go lower.

@[email protected]
link
fedilink
English
711Y

Exactly what actual politicians do!

Aram855
link
fedilink
English
101Y

Zone smaller housing plots. The smaller the house, the lower the rent.

@[email protected]
link
fedilink
English
21Y

If this works, you just added another way to create denser neighborhoods for me.

Patapon Enjoyer
link
fedilink
English
921Y

For people not playing Cities Skylines 2, same question

@[email protected]
link
fedilink
English
81Y

Same answer: build more housing and denser housing

@[email protected]
link
fedilink
English
91Y

I’ve actually looked into this a little bit, and it seems that the best strategy is to have a lot of money. It doesn’t actually decrease the rent at all, and in fact makes it worse in the long run, but it keeps it from becoming a problem for YOU.

@[email protected]
link
fedilink
English
71Y

Beautiful city

Frog-Brawler
link
fedilink
71Y

I tend to re-district for higher capacity and then add new, low density districts more to the outskirts as I progress.

Rentlar
link
fedilink
English
41Y

Rezone for higher density, lower taxes, pollute the area to lower rent values and give them something else to complain about, change to office/commercial.

High rent complaints don’t really hurt your city’s operation too much, it’s just that it’s a blocker to the businesses’ profitability or residential maintenance and can’t level up.

@[email protected]
creator
link
fedilink
English
71Y

Lol pollute the area to lower rent values. That’s so dystopia.

What is this Flynt Michigan?

@[email protected]
link
fedilink
English
-11Y

You there, this is really good post here. Thanks for taking the time to post such valuable information. online casino

Create a post

Welcome to the largest gaming community on Lemmy! Discussion for all kinds of games. Video games, tabletop games, card games etc.

Weekly Threads:

What Are You Playing?

The Weekly Discussion Topic

Rules:

  1. Submissions have to be related to games

  2. No bigotry or harassment, be civil

  3. No excessive self-promotion

  4. Stay on-topic; no memes, funny videos, giveaways, reposts, or low-effort posts

  5. Mark Spoilers and NSFW

  6. No linking to piracy

More information about the community rules can be found here.

  • 1 user online
  • 177 users / day
  • 636 users / week
  • 2.14K users / month
  • 6.43K users / 6 months
  • 1 subscriber
  • 4.99K Posts
  • 103K Comments
  • Modlog