The Game
Sim Safari allows kids or adults to build their own Safari park in Africa, populating it with plants and animals and
balancing the relationship between the two.
The Park is divided into three basic areas: The Park itself, run by the Ecologist, the Camp, run by the Business
Manager, and the Village, which is run by the Village Elder. Each has his or her own concerns. The Ecologist wants
to see a bio-diverse park with lots of species, all balanced. The Business Manager wants you to make more
money than you spend. The Village Elder wants peace and prosperity for his people.
At the Park, you can add plants, animals, or both. If you add too many predators and not enough prey animals, the
predators will eventually starve and the prey will be eaten out of existence. Too many prey and the plants will
likewise suffer. Since every animal and plant costs you money to put into the park, you should really listen to the
Ecologist's advice.
At the Camp, you can add buildings. There are three classes of buildings: basic, improved, and luxury. Basic
accommodations are tents, improved are cottages, and luxury are lodges. This holds true for all the different types
of buildings with a few exceptions: Blinds (where visitors can hide to see animals), Pools, Hot Tubs, and
Amphitheaters. In addition to raising the buildings, you must staff them and connect them to the park with paths and
roads. Try connecting your camp to the park with a road for all the vehicles. Most camp buildings can
accommodate larger amounts of people as the luxury rate rises. The opposite is true of the tour vehicles.
At the Village, you can hire staff for the camp. If your park is doing well, the villagers are able to add such things as
wells, carts, fences, and medical clinics. If the village is not doing well, poaching becomes more common. You can
also fire staff at the Village, but too many firings make people unwilling to work at your camp or in your park.
You can judge how well you are doing by the number of stars your camp is rated with. You get one star for having
more than 15 species in your park or people in your camp, and two stars for both. Each advisor you manage to
keep happy adds another star. Rejoice if you receive five stars . . . but how long can you keep it that way?
The game also offers a game within the game, called "Safari Smarts." It asks 20 questions about African animals.
Getting a question right gives you two points. If you ask for a hint, it costs one point. This game can also be timed.
Note: My compatibility CD does not alter the retail game or bypass copy protection. It allows the original media to
install and run correctly on any recent version of Windows.