![]() ![]() Your ultimate aim is, of course, to make as much money as possible, but there is a story mode as well, that sets you a series of structured goals in order to advance your way through a narrative, develop a rivalry with another character and perhaps find out what Mr. ![]() He’ll even let you have one floor of the building rent-free - but you’ll have to pay for any further expansion.įrom here, your job consists of building new rooms in the tower, hiring staff to occupy those rooms, setting those staff to work, recruiting idols and producing a variety of media using said idols. Fujimoto, as your new friend is known, is keen to go somewhat “legit”, and thus encourages you to start your own idol agency. Having previously run a somewhat shady operation out of the building, it seems that Mr. In Idol Manager, you are cast in the role of a new producer who is taking over an abandoned building at the behest of a local businessman of questionable background, morals and ethics. ![]() Idol Manager is very much a modern take on the classic ’90s management sim, with a few concessions to today’s gaming trends, such as some light “clicker” elements and a visual novel-style narrative component. And don’t even get me started on Tiny Tower how anyone thought that game’s utterly mindless nature was a successor to the classic SimTower is beyond me.īut I digress. No-one has ever quite forgiven EA for what they did to Theme Park and Dungeon Keeper, nor Atari for their recent crimes against RollerCoaster Tycoon. In more recent years, the mobile and casual games markets threatened to all but destroy the classic management sim by providing experiences that looked like the old-school sims of yore, but which were actually mindless, shallow tap-and-wait (or pay-to-skip) affairs in which no strategy or actual management was involved. ![]()
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