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1996.11.21: Train Simulator Sagami Railway Main Line 9000 Series (Yokohama - Ebina) 1997.03.21: Train Simulator Deutsche Bahn West Rhine Railway (Bingen - Koblenz) 1997.05.16: Train Simulator Nanbu Jukan Railway (Also released as a Collector's Edition) (Shichinohe - Noheji) 1997.06.18: Train Simulator Keihin Kyuko Railway Main Line, Kurihama Line
Each Densha de Go title contains actual train (or tram) routes based on real services in Japan. For the most part, the user's task is to drive the train and adhere to a very exacting timetable, including stopping at stations to within as little as 30 cm of a prescribed stopping point, ideally within half a second of the scheduled arrival time.
[a] is a 1997 train simulator arcade game developed and published by Taito in Japan. Players are tasked with guiding a train to its destination under a time limit while managing its acceleration and speed limitations. It features real-world train stations and train lines from Japan, including the Yamanote Line and Keihin–Tōhoku Line.
Densha de Go! 2 Kōsoku-hen (Japanese: 電車でGO!2 高速編, "Go by Train! 2: High Speed Volume") is a train simulator. It is part of the Densha de Go! series. It was released in the arcades in Japan in 1998. It was ported to PlayStation, Nintendo 64, WonderSwan, Neo Geo Pocket Color, Windows, Dreamcast, and Game Boy Color.
Railfan (レールファン) is a train simulator co-developed by Ongakukan and Taito for the PlayStation 3 system. It was released in Japan on December 20, 2006. It was released in Japan on December 20, 2006.
Train Sim World 5 also includes a Conductor Mode, Route Hopping, Fast Travel and an updated Live Map. [22] Just Trains' second route for the Train Sim World series was the 90-mile (140 km) Preston–Carlisle stretch of the West Coast Main Line, including Shap Summit. [23] Set in the late 1980s, it also features the Morecambe branch line from ...
D51 426: (Front end only) Preserved at JR East Railway Museum, Saitama, Saitama (Cab section is used as a driving simulator) D51 428: Preserved in Higashi-Chofu Park in Ota, Tokyo; D51 444: Preserved at the SL Hiroba in Kitami, Hokkaido; D51 451: Preserved in Showa Park in Akishima, Tokyo; D51 452: Preserved at Ome Railway Park in Ōme, Tokyo
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.