![]() ![]() You can’t do that in Bus Simulator, but you can pick up people at the bus stop and drop them off. It was better than my Taxi Driver stint picking up hookers and having a ruckus with bad-boy-yardies. Now, I don’t know about you, but a few times here and there, I stole a bus in Grand Theft Auto and attempted to drive passengers about. The essential bit of info here is this is a bus simulator, so you need to be driving. ![]() You can take a back seat and have drivers, well… drive for you – but that’s not the point. From planning a route to assigning new drivers to new routes with specific vehicles, there are a lot of ways to progress in the game. And no, I’m not being cute with slang.Īt the beginning of each run, you have objectives to meet. How is it that I hear them over my engine throughout the city? You can adjust volumes manually, but it’s only the birds that bother me. The same can be said about the ambience from birds. Yes, it’s realistic, based on my own experience, but it’s not something I want to re-live at home. Or someone sneezing for the umpteenth time, passengers were leaving their rubbish or loud music playing through oversized headphones. Hearing the same dialogue of “Is so-and-so sick?” to the reply of “No, he’s sick again”. The simulation experience isn’t just the driving and planning routes, but the feeling of being on a bus for longer than necessary. Least, that’s what the bus PR in the game wants you to think. This all brings in money and experience to take over the world with the ethereal feeling of riding on a bus. Thanks, Brexit.Īnyways, you transport folk back and forth in the most pleasant way possible (no extras, just driving) and behind the scenes, you configure new routes and assign a driver and bus to take the torch on a designated journey. The latter isn’t in it – this is Europe, and everyone is terrific here/there. Your job is to ferry Johnny Public about town, the industrial areas and woods with banjo playing rednecks. So what’s it all about then, apart from the obvious? You play a nomadic bus driver and set up your own bus company to change the public’s view on public transport in a fictitious urban and rural environment. ![]() Yes, it’s quite good fun, and no, you don’t need any interest in the bus phenomena or subscribe to that (hopefully) made up magazine. Is it actually any good, and do you have to have images from Bus Hustler Monthly plastered on your wall to get along with this title? Yes and no. Picking at the title and assuming the content is for fanboys (or girls) is something anyone can do. Bus Simulator doesn’t project any false expectations – it’s a bus simulator, and that’s it. ![]()
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