stash / city builder / pharaoh + cleopatra

Games like Pharaoh + Cleopatra

8 stashed · built from 2,566 Pharaoh + Cleopatra reviews · checked July 2026

Pharaoh + Cleopatra's profile — each match's bars are measured against this
City Building
95
Logistics Depth
85
Content Longevity
95
One More Turn
88
1
Squirrel's Pick Squirrel's PickThe best game on this page. If you only try one, try this. Closest Match Closest MatchThe most similar game to the anchor, by what players say.
ClassicNostalgiaResource Management
$5.99 ~28 hr median no co-op complexity: moderate 94.3% of 8k

The Squirrel's verdictBoth games ask you to build a functioning system from scratch, optimize flow, and manage worker or visitor satisfaction without a combat layer. RollerCoaster Tycoon: Deluxe replaces Pharaoh's historical city-building with amusement park construction—ride placement, queue lines, and guest happiness. At $5.99 with a 28-hour median playtime, it offers the same optimization loop in a shorter, lighter package.

Not for you if you want a historical setting and long-form campaign structure rather than standalone park scenarios.

How it compares
City Building
72
Logistics Depth
35
Content Longevity
78
One More Turn
70
2
Hidden Gem Hidden GemLoved by the players who found it, but still under the radar.

The Final Earth 2

PC
Colony SimSpaceBase-Building
Strong Mods Strong ModsA deep, active modding scene extends it past its base content.
$9.99 ~19.6 hr median no co-op complexity: light 97.3% of 409

The Squirrel's verdictThe resource loop—produce, supply, expand—is the common ground between this and Pharaoh, but The Final Earth 2 sets that loop in a space-colony context with replayable maps and scenarios rather than historical campaigns. At $9.99 and a 19.6-hour median playtime, it suits players who want the satisfaction of a working supply chain in shorter, repeatable sessions. Reviews cite it as easy to restart and hard to put down.

Not for you if you want a historical setting and deep single-playthrough campaigns; some reviewers found the content thin for the price.

How it compares
City Building
72
Logistics Depth
45
Content Longevity
55
One More Turn
78
3
Colony SimMedievalCity Builder
$9.99 ~12.4 hr median no co-op complexity: moderate 85.2% of 5k

The Squirrel's verdictResource chains and worker logistics connect Knights and Merchants to Pharaoh's economic layer, but this game adds real-time troop combat with directional unit facing on top of the production loop. At $9.99 with a 12.4-hour median playtime, sessions run far shorter than what committed city-builder fans typically log. Reviews widely recommend downloading the KaM Remake patch for higher resolutions and a working soundtrack.

Not for you if you want a peaceful city-management focus without a combat layer, or prefer not to install a third-party patch.

How it compares
City Building
72
Logistics Depth
78
Content Longevity
65
One More Turn
70
chase it → games like Knights and Merchants
4

Children of the Nile: Enhanced Edition

PC
City BuilderHistoricalResource Management
$7.99 ~35 hr median no co-op complexity: moderate 84.7% of 471

The Squirrel's verdictSame ancient Egypt city-building foundation, but Children of the Nile drops the walker system entirely: citizens path to markets themselves instead of following supply routes down roads. Individuals are simulated rather than abstracted, and roads/plazas are free to place. For Pharaoh players who want the theme without micromanaging intersections and walker logic.

Not for you if you specifically enjoy managing walker routes and road-network logistics, since this game removes that system rather than refining it.

How it compares
City Building
78
Logistics Depth
62
Content Longevity
55
One More Turn
52
5

Children of the Nile: Alexandria

PC
City BuilderHistorical
$2.49 ~32.7 hr median no co-op complexity: moderate 84.1% of 164

The Squirrel's verdictChildren of the Nile: Alexandria is the expansion to Children of the Nile, adding content to the same individual-citizen simulation that veteran Pharaoh players describe as deeper and less micromanagement-heavy than the Impressions formula. At $2.49 and a 32.7-hour median playtime, it suits players who want long, focused sessions on a single city rather than a broad campaign structure.

Not for you if you want a wide variety of missions and campaigns rather than extended time on one map.

How it compares
City Building
85
Logistics Depth
65
Content Longevity
78
One More Turn
80
6
City BuilderColony SimEconomy
$22.99 ~38.6 hr median no co-op complexity: moderate 74.9% of 5k

The Squirrel's verdictSame core loop: Egyptian city building, monument construction, walker-based logistics, and mission-driven campaigns. A New Era updates the visuals and removes some of the original's fire-timer difficulty spikes, but reviewers report army battles now play out automatically with no manual control, and irrigation-road conflicts remain unresolved from 1999.

Not for you if you want manual control over battles or expect the remake to fix long-standing walker and road-building limitations from the original.

How it compares
City Building
82
Logistics Depth
75
Content Longevity
68
One More Turn
72
chase it → games like Pharaoh™: A New Era
7
City BuilderSteampunkResource Management
$19.99 ~11.6 hr median no co-op complexity: moderate 67.8% of 1k

The Squirrel's verdictLethis runs the same walker-based production chains and housing evolution loop as Pharaoh, with a steampunk setting instead of ancient Egypt. Reviews describe it as a direct copy of the Impressions formula rather than an expansion of it. Median playtime sits at 11.6 hours, a fraction of the hundreds Pharaoh veterans log, suggesting a shorter, more contained build.

Not for you if you want new systems beyond the Impressions template, or you've already mastered every mechanic Pharaoh teaches.

How it compares
City Building
62
Logistics Depth
55
Content Longevity
35
One More Turn
42
8

Empire Architect

PC
City BuilderRPGEconomy
$14.99 ~7.5 hr median no co-op complexity: moderate 65.5% of 171

The Squirrel's verdictEmpire Architect runs the same Impressions-era mechanics as Pharaoh: service radii, worker bottlenecks, and tiered citizen needs. Reviewers describe it as a close rehash of Caesar III rather than an evolution, noting a clunky interface, frustrating combat, and shallow gameplay. At $14.99, Mixed-rated, with a 7.5-hour median playtime, it suits someone wanting a brief return to that formula rather than a long-term build.

Not for you if you want the depth and staying power of Pharaoh; reviewers consistently call this a shallow imitation with a dated interface.

How it compares
City Building
55
Logistics Depth
52
Content Longevity
30
One More Turn
28

Same series

Grouped by shared name or studio — not matched by the engine.

How the Squirrel matches games

Not tag overlap. We compare what players actually say across hundreds of thousands of reviews about how each game feels to play, then break the comparison into the mechanics you can see in each card. The mark on every bar is Pharaoh + Cleopatra's own score, so you can read where a match runs hotter or cooler than the anchor.

Verdicts are written against a fixed editorial standard, machine-audited, and human spot-checked. Which games make the cut is a human call. Prices and review data refresh automatically. Full method & AI disclosure →