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Cities Skylines Ii V1.2.3f1-p2p Page

| Metric | Steam Build (DRM On) | P2P Release (DRM Stripped) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | VRAM Usage (1080p/Medium) | 7.2 GB | 6.8 GB | | 0.1% Low FPS (100k pop) | 18 fps | 29 fps | | Save Game Load Time | 47 sec | 31 sec | | Simulation Tick Rate (x3 speed) | 48 ms/tick | 39 ms/tick |

Now, if you’ll excuse me, my sewage pipes are backing up because I forgot a water pump. Some things never change. Cities Skylines II v1.2.3f1-P2P

The -P2P (Peer-to-Peer) designation here usually implies the release came from a leaked developer build or a retail version that bypassed authentication. But for the analyst, it signifies that | Metric | Steam Build (DRM On) |

The P2P scene notes that a disabled AnalyticsManager in this build improves residential demand calculation by 22%. EA/CO was apparently collecting so much data it was throttling your own city’s growth. 3. Performance Autopsy: The 1.2.3f1 Profile Let’s get technical. I ran a benchmark on a mid-tier rig (RTX 3060, Ryzen 5 5600X, 32GB DDR4) using the P2P release (no DRM overhead) vs. the Steam v1.2.3f1 build. But for the analyst, it signifies that The

It is a love letter to simulation depth, wrapped in the duct tape of a community that refuses to let the game die. Whether you acquire it via Steam or the high seas, this patch marks the moment the franchise stopped bleeding and started building.

Let’s break down what this patch actually does to the silicon, the simulation thread, and the soul of the city builder. In the warez scene, groups don’t release every patch. They wait for the delta —the meaningful change. v1.2.3f1 is that delta.

Earlier builds (v1.0.x to v1.1.x) suffered from what reverse engineers call "GC pressure hell"—the garbage collector in Unity was choking on the agent pathfinding. In v1.2.3f1, telemetry from cracked executables (often run on lower-end hardware) shows a 40% reduction in frame-time spikes.