SHORT ANSWER:
Install the Visual Studio Tools for Unity (it should automatically get installed when you install Unity), when you do you can tell your .csproj in the "target framework" drop-down to target the special version of .NET Unity uses and you will only be able to compile dll's that have methods and types that Unity supports.
LONG ANSWER:
It is because Unity does not use the installed version of .NET on your computer. Unity uses Mono, and a very old version at that. This allows unity to be ran on multiple platforms and OSes. Because of that you can only use features that are in the supported version of Mono.
However, if you look at their roadmap the alpha build you will see
Scripting: C# Compiler Upgrade
Upgrade Mono C# compiler against our
current .Net 2.0 and 2.0 Subset profiles. Note that this is an upgrade
of the C# compiler only, not the full Mono runtime
Then further on in the "research" phase
Scripting: .NET Profile Upgrade
Upgrade .Net profile to 4.6 enabling access to the latest .Net functionality and APIs.
UPDATE:
You can get a experimental build that uses the 4.6 profile from the stickied post here.
Here are the notes for the 5.6.0b5 beta release
- For this release, the Editor and the following players should be working:
- Windows, OSX, Linux standalone
- iOS with IL2CPP
- Android with IL2CPP and Mono
- Other platforms are known to not work yet, and are probably not worth installing.
- Managed debugging via Visual Studio Tools for Unity or MonoDevelop is not supported in this release. If you want to use VSTU for
editing please use the special build linked at the bottom of this
post.
- The compiler targets the C# 6 language.
- The compiler by default will still target the .Net 4.6 framework profile.
- Known issues
- The Android/Mono build does not work properly with managed code stripping. Please disable managed code stripping for now.
- For some projects, the Windows standalone player can crash on Windows 8.1. This is intermittent, so we would love to see any crash
reports or data about this