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Microsoft Train Simulator (informally abbreviated to MSTS) is a 2001 train simulator game developed by UK-based Kuju Entertainment and published by Microsoft Games (now known as Xbox Game Studios) for Windows. It was released on June 18, 2001.
Trainz is a series of 3D train simulator video games.The Australian studio Auran (since 2007 N3V Games) released the first game in 2001.. The simulators consist of route and session editors called Surveyor, and a Driver module that loads a route and lets the player operate and watch the trains run in either "DCC" mode, which simulates a bare-bones Digital Command Control (DCC) system for the ...
By 2001, Kuju was employing a team of 80 developers, in three separate offices around the UK in London, Surrey and Brighton. Their most notable project at the time was Microsoft Train Simulator. [2] In 2002, Kuju floated on the Alternative Investments Market (AIM) of the London Stock Exchange.
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.
Flying Scotsman is a playable locomotive in the 2001 PC simulation game Microsoft Train Simulator. [119] and in the 2023 PC/Console simulation game Train Sim World 4. [120] The locomotive is also featured in the 2018 racing game Forza Horizon 4, in a Showcase event in which the player must race against the engine. [121]
The Train Simulator PLUS series was designed for the Windows system and its releases were limited to Japan. The first episodes were published by Pony Canyon while the last one was published by Ongakukan. 2000.07.19: Train Simulator PLUS: Keihan Electric Railway (Yodoyabashi-Demachi Yanage) 2000.10.18: Train Simulator PLUS: JR East Chūō Line 2
From January 2008 to May 2010, if you bought shares in companies when Frederic K. Becker joined the board, and sold them when he left, you would have a -30.8 percent return on your investment, compared to a -18.1 percent return from the S&P 500.
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 all move at once, the same speed and direction, much like a real life DC model railway.