Prison Architect: Going Green Expansion Will Come Up This Month
Game developer Double Eleven and publisher Paradox Interactive has announced the newest expansion Prison Architect: Going Green.
The latest expansion is Prison Architect: Going Green
Prison Architect: Going Green expansion will be the next expansion for the popular prison management simulator. It will launch on PC, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and also Nintendo Switch on January 28. Therefore, the new expansion will introduce new management gameplay mechanics and introduce farming. This allows prisoners to grow produce and create a self-sustaining compound.
Prison Architect: Going Green will offer some unique features. Most interesting is that with this expansion, you will be able to build a totally friendly prison. Also, you will be able to farm the land, construct green energy sources, and customize your compound with sustainable materials. This will increase the challenge. Keeping the prison under control will be more challenging with this expansion.
Here are the features of Going Green:
- Fruits of Labor: Farming introduces a new type of Prison Labor. Therefore, allowing prisons to grow potatoes, wheat, apples, and more. Produce can be exported or used as ingredients for inmate meals.
- Room to Grow: Three outdoor rooms facilitate farming: Fruit Orchard, Farm Field and also Vegetable Allotment. But that’s not all. Players can also recruit staff Farm Workers, build a Pantry to store produce, and construct a Shed to house farming-related items.
- Best Buds: Inmates who enjoy nature’s beauty can grow flowers and other plants recreationally in Prison Architect: Going Green. Therefore, gardening affects inmates and gives them a positive recreation activity.
- Trouble is Brewing: With new crops comes new contraband. Prisoners can now secretly grow herbs in the fields and swipe kitchen ingredients to brew Booze. Fields can also become Gang Turf, so keep your guards on alert!
- A Greener New Deal: Prisons get an eco-friendly makeover with Solar, Wind, and Solar/Wind Hybrid power sources. Excess power created by these sustainable methods can be sold back to the grid using the Power Export Meter.