It has still managed to provide a more authentic sim experience, and a few patches will only make this all the better. About This Game Look forward to Bus Simulator 21, and the most comprehensive and advanced fleet in the history of the series. Even so, Stillalive Studios seems to be on the right path here. For better or worse, veterans of the last entry will find a lot of familiarity in terms of the vehicle roster, and the second map which is just Bus Sim 18’s Seaside Valley all over again (albeit with the new route-building toolset, but it’s noticeably less visually detailed than Angel Shores). Perhaps some further optimization is needed, as a colleague of mine noticed similarly choppy performance on an even more capable machine.ĭespite these caveats, Bus Simulator 21 is still a step in the right direction for the series. Playing with settings did help a bit, but it’s not as smooth as I was expecting. Yet, taking control of a bus always resulted in the framerate immediately tanking to the 40fps range, and sometimes lower. When not driving, the sim would hit a solid 60fps (v-synced) on my rig with an RTX 2060 and Core i7. While I did sing its praises for its graphical fidelity, Bus Simulator 21 seems to be a little heavy-handed on the resource requirements. It’s like being trapped in an episode of On the Buses directed by Marcel Duchamp.But what really interrupts this otherwise sweet ride is the sim’s performance. “There’s a stray cat at the University of Technology”, says one regular “I shouldn’t have given up following winter fashions”, repeats another at fairly regular intervals. You get the sense of taking part in a living, changing environment – even if all the passengers who get on your bus speak in weird robotic voices and spout bizarre randomised phrases throughout the journey to seemingly no one in particular. That and all the bills for pagoda damage. If you feel like it, you can randomly pull over and perform spot-checks on the passengers, to ensure no one has snuck on without paying – but I’m never really that bothered, which is perhaps why my company, Disaster Buses, is not making a huge amount of money. Photograph: Astragonīut there is something wonderfully Zen about repeatedly circumnavigating a busy city, stopping occasionally to let people on, selling them tickets, giving them change and then moving off. (That’ll cost you $20k in insurance claims.) Other road-users are massively unsympathetic and pedestrians will happily step out on to a crossing right in front of you even when it’s very clear you haven’t managed to get your windscreen wipers working and therefore can’t see anything.Ī sort of recurring fever dream … Bus Simulator 21. The turning circle takes a long time to get used to, slow at the start and then wildly fast, sending you careering on to the pavement and people’s driveways and indeed, people. You can choose from a range of difficulty levels depending on how much control you want over every facet of the transit experience – I went for the easiest, “Day Tripper”, because even with all the assists switched on, driving a bus is still like piloting an ocean liner along the Shropshire Union Canal. It puts you into a large open city, modelled on the US west coast, and tasks you with setting up a profitable public transport system, while also driving some of the routes yourself. I then tried to drive off with the accessibility ramp still extended.īus Simulator 21 is the latest in a series of highly authentic, idiosyncratic simulation games from Austrian developer stillalive Studios. I also got fined for not indicating properly and for running a red light, and then one of my passengers stood in the bus’s open doorway and wouldn’t move until I got out of my seat and went to talk to him. Just three stops into my inaugural route I was already running eight minutes late, having caused considerable delay (and $712 of damage) by crashing into an ornamental pagoda. M y first day as a bus driver did not go well. Your Schedule.’ marketing line, Bus Simulator 21 from astragon Entertainment and stillalive Studios will be making stops on Xbox One, PS4 and PC in 2021.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |