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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
Train Simulator (トレインシミュレーター, Torein Shimyurētā, or abbreviated "TS") is a Japanese train simulation game series produced by Ongakukan. The game is significant as it was one of the earliest of its kind since the series started in 1995.
A railroad game is any game that depicts the building of rail transport networks. Subcategories This category has the following 4 subcategories, out of 4 total.
NIMBY Rails is entirely set on an OpenStreetMap-based map of the whole world, without computer-generated maps or levels. [1] The game map starts out empty, without any preexisting trains or buildings, and the player builds railway track and stations with little restriction save for existing roads and bodies of water.
Fixed track parts, rolling stock, scenery, building, tree and hills similar to a real life model railway. Users can also control the trains once the virtual railway is built and planned, leading to some people to call HVR a train simulator. Some advanced parts such as turntables are absent from the game, and all engines on the same track will ...
The game ends when the players have collectively earned a certain amount of money ("breaking the bank") or when a player or computer opponent goes bankrupt, at which point the player having the highest total of stock valuation plus cash on hand wins. As in the board game, tactics such as looting companies of their assets, using buy/sell ...
Rob Bell explores the era when our modern railways were born in the industrial heartlands of the North-East, where for over 150 years coal was king. Visiting former collieries, living museums and meeting former miners, he tells the story of the 1822 Hetton line, the world's first railway designed for steam locomotives.
Ken Hoole published over forty books as well as numerous magazine articles. [6]The study centre, The Ken Hoole Study Centre, opened 1992, at the Darlington Railway Centre and Museum (now Head of Steam museum) in Darlington, inheriting its core collection from a bequeathal from Ken Hoole's archive, as well as including the library of the NERA.