When it comes to city-builders, there’s plenty of fish in the sea. But one upcoming title is proving itself actually worth diving into.Kasedo Games and Megapop recently announced that Life Below will hit digital storefronts just over a month from now on May 26. This coral reef-themed city builder tasks you with rebuilding a devastated ecosystem, restoring biodiversity, and fending off escalating environmental threats. I’m a sucker for city-builders: Fabledom, Dorfromantik, Frostpunk, Town to City—all games that have hijacked too many of my weekends in the best way possible. Life Below already had my attention on aesthetics alone, but after seeing demos of it at GDC, it’s firmly on my radar. Image via MegapopAt GDC, I spoke to Megapop founder and CEO Jørgen Tharaldsen, who walked me through several save files and systems. At the beginning of the preview, I didn’t know what to expect. The city-builder genre is a crowded territory, and too many developers settle for a fresh coat of paint on familiar mechanics.But Life Below isn’t that. Before the preview even ended, the upcoming city-builder cemented a spot on my must-play list.Life Below blends light sci-fi storytelling with a surprisingly grounded ecological angle. Tharaldsen told me Megapop collaborated with marine biologists to keep things authentic where it counts, while still building a narrative around a mythic presence guiding your reef’s recovery. Even the presentation reflects that approach; its soundscape, for example, pulls from real underwater recordings, giving the reef a sense of place that goes beyond visuals. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CgfoUgMdf3wWhere most city builders revolve around workers or citizens, Life Below swaps them out for marine life. Fish and reef dwellers act as your population, each contributing to the ecosystem in different ways. As biodiversity grows, so does your codex, and you’ll unlock optional entries that dig into the real-world science behind each species. The threats you’ll face aren’t abstract, either. Oil spills, coral bleaching, invasive jellyfish colonies, rising ocean temperatures—these are real pressures devastating reefs today. The difference here is how the game frames them: you’re equipped to respond. The systems you’ve built up—your species, structures, and resources—are designed to push back, giving each crisis a sense of agency instead of inevitability. Progression looks meaty, too. The tech tree is sprawling, with upgrades that boost workers’ movement speed, carrying capacity, and more. On top of that, multiple zones introduce new challenges and species, keeping the momentum going as your reef expands. Image via MegapopWrap all that in a vibrant art style, and you’ve got something that stands out in a crowded genre. The reef pops with color and motion, making every expansion feel alive in a way many city grids don’t. Life Below launches on May 26 exclusively on PC, and you can wishlist the game on Steam now.The post This gorgeous underwater city-builder just got a release date. Here’s why I’m already hooked appeared first on Destructoid.