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A train simulator (also railroad simulator or railway simulator) is a computer-based simulation of rail transport operations. They are generally large complicated software packages modeling a 3D virtual reality world implemented both as commercial trainers, and consumer computer game software with 'play modes' which lets the user interact by stepping inside the virtual world.
Rolling Line is an independent PC and VR sandbox game developed and published by New Zealand game developer Gaugepunk Games.The game simulates railway modelling with a low-poly aesthetic in which players can explore and create model-train layouts and share them online for others to play.
The video for the original Train Simulator series of games was 308×156 pixels at 30 frames per second using Intel Indeo 2 video compression and AVI file container. Each game contains Japanese lines and trains, with the exception of four games featuring overseas routes, in Germany , France , Taiwan , and the United States of America .
This category is for train simulators, vehicle simulation games that feature trains, not for business simulation games that feature trains. See also: Category:Railroad business simulation video games
Later in 2018, the third version, titled Train Sim World, was released on Microsoft Windows, Xbox One and PlayStation 4, featuring three routes: Great Western Express: London Paddington–Reading, Rapid Transit: Dessau Hauptbahnhof–Markkleeberg-Gaschwitz and Northeast Corridor: New Rochelle–Newark Liberty International Airport, as well as Sand Patch Grade for the Windows version only.
A cross-over with the Train Simulator series. Like that series it uses full motion video, but uses a version of the Densha de Go gameplay user interface. The game was re-released for PSP in 2005 under the name of Mobile Train Simulator + Densha de Go! Tōkyō Kyūkō-hen.
Train Simulator Classic 2024 (originally RailWorks and Train Simulator) is a train simulation game developed by Dovetail Games. [1] It is the successor to Rail Simulator, and was released online on 12 June 2009 and in stores on 3 July. [2] It is a Steamworks title, which means it uses and requires Steam to activate and to deliver core game ...
Rail Simulator is a train simulation published by Electronic Arts (EA). [1] It was produced by Kuju Entertainment.After release of the EU version, EA's support and further development of the title was taken over by Rail Simulator Developments Ltd, who continued to provide updates, fixes, official expansion packs and new content to players.