Reus 2 – How to Get Luxury Achievements

Luxury Achievements Guide

Luxuries are small bonuses that you can get based on the resources in your city. You get them when your city reaches a new Tech level.

Your city’s leader will invent something, and you’ll see a message about it. The “Inventions” section in the city tab shows your luxuries and the bonuses they give. This is also where you can see the good and bad effects from each Era, like the “Has Plague” debuff from the Plague Era.

To get the luxury you want, play in Free Play or post-game on Relaxing difficulty. Save your game before placing the Science Biotica that will start the new Invention. Try to only have Biotica in your city that have already given you a Luxury in another city. It seems like you can’t get the same Luxury twice on one planet. You can also try removing unwanted Luxuries by upgrading tiles to higher tiers. Work with cities that have low Science, so their Tech level goes up faster.

There are some achievements related to Luxuries:

Americana:

Have the Fried Chicken and Fruit Pie Luxuries on the same Planet. Fried Chicken comes from fowl-type Animals like Jungle Fowl (Rainforest) or Guineafowl (Savanna). Fruit Pie comes from Fruit Plants like Papaya Tree (Rainforest) or Blueberry (Forest).

Both sides of the Story:

Have Cuddly Pets and Stew Luxuries on the same planet. Stew comes from Herbivore Critters like Rabbit (Forest, Taiga) or Guinea Pig (Rainforest). Cuddly Pets seem to only come from Guinea Pigs.

All that Glitters:

Have Majestic Earrings, Majestic Amulets, and Majestic Rings all on one planet. Majestic Rings come from Silver (Taiga), Majestic Earrings from Ruby (Desert), and Majestic Amulets from Nephrite (Taiga).

Rockin’ Bowties:

Have the Pet Rocks Luxury, which comes from Stone (Rainforest, Taiga).

Jan Bakowski
About Jan Bakowski 474 Articles
A lifelong gamer Jan Bakowski, also known as Lazy Dice, was always interested in gaming and writing. He lives in Poland (Wrocław). His passion for games began with The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time on the Nintendo 64 back in 1998. Proud owner of Steam Deck, which has become his primary gaming platform. He’s been making guides since 2012. Sharing his gaming experience with other players has become not only his hobby but also his job.

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