

- #LONDON UNDERGROUND SIMULATOR GAMES INSTALL#
- #LONDON UNDERGROUND SIMULATOR GAMES DRIVERS#
- #LONDON UNDERGROUND SIMULATOR GAMES MAC#
It's the dead of night and you've got 20 tons of explosives resting precariously on your trailer. Your GPS sends you down some narrow, twisting country road in the middle of nowhere.
#LONDON UNDERGROUND SIMULATOR GAMES INSTALL#
Don't bother paying a guy in flip-flops £50 a session for transcendental meditation lessons: install Euro Truck Simulator 2 instead.īut then it catches you off guard. It clears my mind, and eventually the only thing I'm worried about is where the next service station is, because I'm low on petrol, or if I'm going to get these bags of sand to Rotterdam in time. If I'm stressed out or feeling overworked I'll go and drive down the M4 for half an hour in a big fucking truck. It's so relaxing, in fact, that it's become an unexpected form of meditation for me.

#LONDON UNDERGROUND SIMULATOR GAMES MAC#
You can listen to live radio from whichever country you're in, and I have fond memories of screaming down a rain-soaked autobahn listening to Fleetwood Mac on a German classic rock station.

It's bizarrely soothing, like a screensaver for your brain. The muffled rumble of the tarmac under your wheels, the swish of the wipers, raindrops tapping at the windows. But it's here that the game is at its most hypnotic. Like driving on an actual motorway, then. Here, your only interaction is keeping your wheels straight, managing your speed and occasionally changing lanes. Most of your time is spent on long motorways. Time I could have spent hunting space pirates in Elite, battling demons in Dark Souls or just going outside. That's an entire day and some change I've spent driving along imaginary motorways, obeying the speed limit, delivering wood shavings to Stuttgart and hauling powdered milk to Aberdeen. So I had a go, as a joke, and ended up playing it for over 30 hours. Not because I had some burning desire to drive heavy goods vehicles around Germany, but because I heard from a few people that, honestly, seriously, it's really good. I don't play many sims, but I was intrigued by Euro Truck Simulator 2. Suddenly these games are being exposed to audiences of millions, and normal people are starting to play them and realise that, hey, some of them are actually pretty good. But thanks to YouTube, that's slowly changing. They're the contemporary equivalent of the stereotypical train-spotting, Thermos-clutching anorak of modern English folklore. Simulators, and the people who play them, are easy targets for piss-taking. Then I overshot Edgware Road by about half a mile. It took me almost an hour, with a manual, just to start the engine.
#LONDON UNDERGROUND SIMULATOR GAMES DRIVERS#
Or how about Garbage Truck Simulator, which asks the question: do you have what it takes to be a trash tycoon? And if you've ever wondered why tube drivers earn £50,000 a year, try playing London Underground Simulator. There's OMSI, which sees you driving a bus around the streets of 1980s Berlin. Niche simulators are quietly successful on PC, and there's an astonishing variety of them. These guys don't want to fly starships, run criminal empires or pretend they're windswept warriors from the Wilderness of Death: they want to empty bins, fertilise crops and tarmac roads. For others, it's about being whisked away to another world and escaping the grey routine of everyday life. For some, it's about learning and mastering a game's systems, and the feeling of empowerment and accomplishment that comes with it.
