I think I need not only practical, but theoretical ruling about Edit Town issue. Correct me where I'm wrong.
Edit Town usage is limited by the rules. But every other EP brings us new lots we'd rather have in our towns, and EA doesn't always bother with giving us proper library lots and enough empty lots for that matter. The main intention of a player should be to keep a town as close to its original version as possible (
link). But, as far as it goes, we can use Edit Town without permission for following:
Placing empty lots wherever possible (
link)
Changing empty lot assignment from residential to community (
link)
Rezoning empty community lots to another community lot assignment (
link)
Removing some empty lots for the sake of placing there empty lots of needed size (
link)
Placing EA library & Store lots wherever possible (rules)
Removing automatically placed new lots (such as Fire Station after Ambitions or Supernatural Hangout after Supernatural) and placing them where we, not the game, want them (
link)
Placing two or more lots of the same functionality (two Diners) in town, as long as they are from the library (
link)
Saving Supernatural Rabbithole Lots into the library and treating them as library lots (
link)
Placing pretty much whatever we want on purchased lots (rules)
We can't, however, without permission (and must have a good reason to):
Replace community lot with similar lot from another town (e.g. replacing Sports Stadium with Starlight Sports Stadium – there is a reason to do so, but we need permission) (
link) (
or can we?)
Overuse Edit Town ("close to original" principle)
We can not at all bulldoze or replace existing (non-empty) community and residential lots (except for particular cases of Metro's ruling, which are not to make a rule from). (
link)
Am I right?
Also, couple of questions:
- should we do all the rezoning at the start of the game, or we can tweak it during the challenge?
- can we at some point rezone all empty residential lots to community assignment in advance? There aren't going to be any more residential lots in town.