The coffee and the ice cream are the best things in the country.
nivenkos
Like a mix between the UK and Germany.
The housing situation is also quite bad, it's near impossible to rent if you move here for work (unless your company acts as a guarantor).
The rent-controlled housing queue system is extremely corrupt and long - at least 8-year queues (unless you're related to the local administration). Taxes are also insanely high on workers - 56+% income tax, 25% VAT.
The currency has collapsed since COVID so wages are far worse relative to Europe than before (and let's not even mention the USA).
It's far from everywhere (you're not going on holiday to Russia these days), with few direct flights, and long delivery times for imports.
But still the transport is quite good, there are a fair number of new apartments if you can buy a leasehold (it has its own issues with high fees and interest rates though), and a lot of online services.
I'd give it a 6/10.
The US is doing great though. It's just Europe getting hammered.
This will continue until Europe resolves the migration crisis, and deals with the growing insecurity and the collapse in living standards.
Then your bigger problem is using Windows...
I never played any of the others so I can't really comment.
I just really loved the living world - it's why I tried the game after playing Oblivion.
So few games have that - Dwarf Fortress, Ultima and Oblivion still stand far ahead of the rest.
I learnt Spanish like this. Mainly finishing Duolingo and downloading some textbooks and doing a few MOOC courses and listening to slow podcasts, and then watching basic movies.
Once I got to the point I could watch movies and TV, I would watch a movie almost every single day.
It's a lot of work, but to get to the point of speaking and listening it is necessary.
It took about 2 years in total - and then I started a job working in Spanish.