ποΈ Greater Greater Metro City
An empty lot, a blank grid and a vision β Greater Greater Metro City is waiting for its first block. Tap a ready building to collect its tax, reinvest in bigger blocks, and keep your grid in the black. Keep the meters positive and the tax flowing until you hit the goal β then expand into a tougher layout. It models a frontier economy: blocks cost more and take longer, but each one pays out richly for patient planners. Greater Greater Metro City is a free micro city-building game that plays instantly in your browser with one thumb β no download, no sign-up. Unlike a plain idle tycoon, here a resource puzzle sits underneath every tap: a house only pays tax while the power and water it needs are covered, so the fun is in the balancing act. Compact grids, clean vector zones, satisfying collect pops and a steadily rising tax goal make it a moreish "one more block" planner you can dip into any time. It is the kind of low-stress, high-reward game that suits a five-minute break or a long, lazy evening. Everything runs right on the page with no sign-up, so you can jump straight back in any time.
How to play
- Select a building from the shop bar β start with a β‘ power plant and π§ water tower.
- Tap an empty plot to place it; the cost is spent and a timer starts.
- Add houses and shops only while your power and water meters stay positive.
- Tap a ready building (πͺ) to collect its tax income, then reinvest.
- Grow your tax income to the goal without letting a meter go negative.
Controls
One thumb: tap a building to select, tap a plot to place, tap a ready plot to collect. Tap π to mute. Touch or mouse β no keyboard needed.
Features
- Zone Houses, Apartments, Shops and more on a 5Γ4 grid
- Frontier economy β its own build costs, speeds, yields and tax goal
- Power β‘ and water π§ balance gates your tax income
- Real-time production with tappable collect pops
- Particles, coin pops and WebAudio sound with a mute toggle
- Rising tax goals and a saved best score
FAQ
Homes and shops need power and water. If the β‘ or π§ meter is negative, those buildings stall until you add another power plant or water tower.