
W&R is a sandbox small-country building game, and often gets compared to Cities: Skylines. TL DR: This game makes things that you take for granted in other games feel like a rewarding accomplishment. While cheats are on, pressing 'Ctrl + R' allows panning the camera with an xbox controller cinematically (clicking the sticks might cause a crash) With cheat mode active, you get a bunch of additional options in the settings menu, letting you do stuff like activate the map editor (which you can also use to build new rural buildings/ churches/ etc) and access various debugging options. While placing signals, you can press 'Ctrl' to toggle the coloured rail block overlay. Also, it even happens when you type 'n' in text boxes, like when you enter the name of the save.) (Technically this is a cheat, but it doesn't require cheat mode. Pressing 'N' boosts the growth of grass and crops. Hold 'H' to display nodes on your infrastructure, making it easier to see if something isn't properly connected Hold 'Ctrl + B' in vehicle list to display coordinates Use them only when you try to get stuck vehicles un-stuck. 'Ctrl + F' empties a vehicle's fuel tank and 'Ctrl + H' resets a vehicle's schedule.

'Ctrl + T' colours your roads green and red to show traffic congestion Holding 'Alt' while playing in windowed mode will make an icon appear in the top right that lets you resize the screen 'F7' displays frames per second and performance information

'F4' toggles the snapping of new infrastructure to existing Press 'Alt + a number' to swap to another hotkey bar page. '1' to '0' activates whatever you put on your hotkey bar at the top. 'Q' and 'E' raise and lower pipelines, cableway pylons, underground infrastructure, etc Hold 'Ctrl' for more precision or hold 'Shift' to get the old curve behavior.

Use the 'mousewheel' while placing roads, pipelines, etc to set the desired curvature. Hold 'Shift' while placing roads to drag a rectangle to batch upgrade a lot of roads at once. Pressing 'R' will rotate it in 90° steps. Hold 'Ctrl' while placing a building to rotate it with more precision and to disable its automatic connections.
