

So, you splice, you build, and you expand. You'll need to keep stretching out your city limits, then, and paying the increasingly expensive expansion cost to keep splicing. Houses and buildings take up land - which is a very precious commodity. You also need a free space in a residential building before you can get a new clone.

If you don't have that clone's primary building (the first building in our list of jobs), you'll get it for free, and can plop it down in your ever-growing space city. Grey means the splice won't work.Īll clones work in specific buildings. Yellow means you've done that mix before. You can tell if you've stumbled upon a new recipe because the test tube button is pink. A vet and an Olympic swimmer make a marine biologist, for example. Enter the Arrival Center and splice together two professions to make a new one. Plus, we asked Abhishek Radhakrishnan, chief creative officer at Pixel People developer LambdaMu Games, to give us some of his expert tips. We thought we'd wrap up our Pixel People walkthrough series with some general tips to help you on your way. Previously, we revealed the recipes you need to cook up all 150 clones, and showed you every pixellated building that's featured in the game. With a little gene-splicing thrown in for good measure. In this sci-fi city builder, you're in charge of an extraterrestrial effort to rebuild and repopulate the planet. Welcome back to our comprehensive guide to Chillingo's latest freemium hit Pixel People.
