


However, the benefits of this remake easily outweigh this drawback. One drawback is that save games from the original Caesar 3 or Julius are not compatible with Augustus. There are also new graphics settings to change resolution, window mode, zoom level, and aspects of the user interface, as well as new high-quality music and samples that used to be available on the Sierra On-Line website. Along with new difficulty settings to fine-tune scenarios and endless games in terms of fire risk, building collapse risk, enemy strength, and more. They’ve also added new quality-of-life improvements like the roadblock seen in Pharaoh, Zeus, and Emperor, new gameplay and construction mechanics like buildings that can be built on top of existing ones, expanded options for granaries and warehouses and changed the maintenance costs for some buildings. The new buildings and features include large monuments that require a lot of resources and workers to build (similar to the pyramids of Pharaoh), a food supply post for military forts, and the ability to rotate buildings (work in progress). It’s called Augustus, and it’s like a warp into a new era. Julius + Augustus = Caesar over 9000īut wait, there’s more! Some other fans have created a fork of Julius to enhance this remake of Caesar 3 with new buildings, features, settings, UI improvements, and bug fixes. Thanks to Julius, we can enjoy Caesar 3 in various 16:9 or even 4k resolutions, and even import savegames from the original Caesar 3. It follows the same logic and mechanics as the original game and can be played on several modern platforms, including Windows 11 and Android 12 devices. Fortunately, some fans have created Julius, an open-source redevelopment of Caesar 3 that was released on GitHub in 2018. However, the game is nearly 25 years old and may no longer run on all modern machines. It’s considered one of the best city-building games ever made (after Pharaoh, of course 🥰).

Caesar 3 received positive reviews from critics and sold over 500,000 copies worldwide by 2000. Its lead designer, Chris Beatrice (also known as the founder of Tilted Mill Entertainment, the creators of Immortal Cities: Children of the Nile, Caesar 4, and SimCity Societies), has truly done an amazing job with the graphics, sound, and gameplay back then. It’s a game that was and still is loved by many strategy gamers and has immersed many of us in Roman history. Augustus: the open-source game that’s reviving the classic Caesar 3 on multiple platforms EN 0 repliesĪh, Caesar 3, the classic city-building game developed by Impressions Games and published by Sierra On-Line on September 30, 1998.
