![]() ![]() Instead, you have the more familiar noisy passenger or person blocking the door. No longer do you clean up at the end of a route or return lost packages to passengers. There’s been a change in what maintenance tasks you do whilst behind the wheel. I don’t see any cosmetic upgrades but more experienced stops are capable of handling more connections. Servicing passengers at stops allows them to level up. Upgrading bus stops is now something you can manually do from the menu. ![]() Indicating and handing tickets out take up most of your duties but there’s plenty of other tasks to be taken on. I like to keep things simple and driving still leaves plenty for me to do. I keep the default options so kneeling at the kerbside and other intricacies are automated. Seeing one of your own buses flash at you as you work a route always feels nice and the length of the campaign does remind me how much more ground you cover.ĭriving is a fairly leisurely experience. As your company owns an uncontested monopoly, you can really see control you have over the bus routes. I enjoyed the territorial aspect as more streets come under your wing. During the campaign you’re mostly tasked with building a bus network by connecting the city’s districts to existing routes. There’s no confusion over objectives and it all moves more fluidly from one job to the next. Now, you’re largely out driving buses and missions come at you with a lot more frequency. There was plenty of time spent loading and feeling somewhat disconnected from the world. Previously, you spent a lot more time in menus as you set up routes and accomplished missions. The structure of Bus Simulator 21 has resulted in something more streamlined. Crucially, it’s a much more stable experience with no crashes or glitches to speak of. There’s some texture pop-in but I’ve tended to notice it less and less as I’ve played more. It’s not pushing many boundaries but it holds together on a technical level. Movement of pedestrians is still fairly robotic but the sunny weather opens things up for some scenic vistas. Visually, it looks slightly more polished. People move about, there’s a lot more traffic and parked cars and it looks more animated than in 2018. It is larger and certainly seems to carry more life. Unlike the Californian city, it’s a largely flat locale, not too dissimilar from the last game’s map. ![]() The latter appears to be a San Francisco facsimile with a Chinatown district and some neighbouring villages that surround a bay area. There’s both European and American maps on offer. Now three years have passed and the time spent tweaking the formula seems to have worked out for the better.īus Simulator 21 makes a change in location. Despite this, it had some clear issues with meeting mission objectives and technical issues. The relaxed and charming running of a bus company managed to resonate with me as a regular public transport peasant. Stillalive Studios managed to impress with me Bus Simulator. All rights reserved.Septemin PS4 / Reviews tagged bus simulator 21 / driving / job simulator / public transport / route mapping / stillalive studios / tickets please / time-keeping by Mike All other names, trademarks and logos are property of their respective owners. The buses in this game may be different from the actual products in shapes, colours and performance. in the United States of America and elsewhere. Unreal® is a trademark or registered trademark of Epic Games, Inc. The VOLVO trademarks (word and device), other related trademarks, if applicable, and the Volvo designs are licensed by the AB Volvo Group. and used under license by astragon Entertainment GmbH.THE SCANIA DESIGN, TRADEMARK, LOGOTYPE AND WORDMARK IS USED UNDER LICENSE FROM SCANIA CV AB. IVECO BUS and URBANWAY are trademarks owned by IVECO S.p.A. ![]() Manufactured under licence of MAN, Alexander Dennis Limited, BYD, Blue Bird and Vicinity Motor Corp LLC. “Setra” and “K im Kreis” are trademarks of EvoBus GmbH and used under license by astragon Entertainment GmbH. “Mercedes-Benz” and “Three pointed star in a ring” are trademarks of Daimler AG and used under license by astragon Entertainment GmbH. Bus Simulator, Bus Simulator 21, astragon, astragon Entertainment and its logos are trademarks or registered trademarks of astragon Entertainment GmbH. © 2022 Published and distributed by astragon Entertainment GmbH. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |