Beginner Guide

How to Recognize Cities

Master the three main urban layouts to identify cities instantly.

💡 Pro Tip: Don't try to find specific landmarks first. Look at the "skeleton" of the city (streets and blocks) to determine which continent you are likely looking at.

1. The Grid Layout (North America)

The easiest pattern to spot. Streets run North-South and East-West at perfect right angles, creating square or rectangular city blocks.

Aerial satellite view of Manhattan New York showing distinctive grid street pattern
Appearance

Looks like graph paper or a chessboard. Very organized and repetitive.

Where to find it

USA (New York, Chicago, Phoenix), Canada (Toronto), and some newer Latin American cities. Explore our Cities category to practice identifying grid patterns.

2. The Radial "Spiderweb" (Europe)

Common in historic European capitals. A dense central core (often the old town) with major avenues radiating outward like spokes on a wheel.

Appearance

Chaotic center, ring roads circling it, and straight avenues cutting through like a starburst.

Where to find it

Paris (the classic example), Moscow, Milan, Madrid, Brussels. These cities are featured in Cities Quiz Mode.

3. The Organic Maze (Old World & Asia)

No clear geometry. Streets wind and curve, following the terrain or centuries of unplanned growth. It looks like veins in a leaf or a cracked desert floor.

Appearance

Tightly packed buildings, narrow winding streets, no long straight lines.

Where to find it

North African medinas (Fes, Cairo), historic Asian centers, medieval Italian towns.

4. Detective Strategy: Roof Colors

If the layout isn't clear, check the color of the rooftops. This is a powerful "Elimination Strategy" tool.

5. Port Cities vs Inland Cities

Port cities have distinctive features visible from space that set them apart from landlocked urban areas.

Port City Markers

Look for: Cargo terminals with geometric rectangles (shipping containers), long piers jutting into water, cranes visible as tiny dots, and industrial zones near the waterfront. Examples: Rotterdam, Singapore, Los Angeles.

Inland City Markers

No water access (unless a river port). Look for: Major highway intersections forming the city core, rail yards,and airport prominence. Examples: Denver, Madrid, Johannesburg.

6. Capital Cities vs Industrial Cities

Capital cities often have distinct layouts reflecting their governmental role.

7. Advanced Strategy: Grid Direction

Not all grids are aligned North-South! This is a powerful clue.

🧭 Rotation Analysis:

Aligned with Compass: Most American grid cities (Chicago, New York) align streets with cardinal directions for surveying convenience.

Rotated Grids: Coastal cities often rotate their grid to follow the shoreline. San Francisco's grid tilts to match the peninsula. Melbourne's grid aligns with the Yarra River. If the grid is askew, look for water or terrain features forcing the rotation.

Ready to test your skills?

🏙️ Play Cities Quiz