Compara los precios de Motorcycle Mechanic Simulator 2021 en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Play2Chill S.A.. Publicado por Play2Chill S.A.. Lanzado el 17/11/2021. Disponible en PC, Xbox. Géneros: Casual, Indie, Racing, Simulation.

Scratch the itch of stripping a bike down to its last bolt, but go in knowing the 67% Mixed score on Steam is not the whole story: patient sim fans get a zen loop, everyone else hits a wall fast.

My first honest reaction to Motorcycle Mechanic Simulator 2021 was something like cautious interest followed by a slow, dawning realisation that the game is painfully aware of its own niche and absolutely refuses to stretch beyond it. You start in a home garage taking customer jobs, graduate to a bigger workshop, strip motorcycles down to individual components, source cheap salvage from the junkyard, and eventually auction off your own custom builds. On paper it reads like a two-wheeled cousin of the Car Mechanic Simulator formula, and the lineage is obvious enough that the comparison is unavoidable. The repair loop itself is the strongest argument for buying this. Each job arrives as a customer mail with a brief description of the problem, and the optional bonus objectives, where a client vaguely mentions the engine stalling or losing power, are genuinely the most satisfying moments. Hunting down a worn air flow meter or a degraded gasket by methodically inspecting components actually feels like problem-solving rather than a checklist. The disassembly model requires you to remove surrounding parts in the correct order before you can reach deeper components, and a maintenance mode lets you check fluid levels, component condition, and whether the engine will turn over before you hand the bike back. The junkyard adds a light economic layer: pay a small entry fee, scavenge randomised second-hand parts at a discount, and flip restored wrecks at auction once you hit the relevant experience threshold. The customisation side is deeper than it first looks, with a wide palette of paintable panels and a sandbox mode that unlocks everything for free-form builds. Here is where it gets complicated. The game sits at a Mixed rating on Steam, and that split reflects two very different types of player colliding with the same product. Casual sim fans who just want to unwind find a slow, meditative experience that can clock twenty-plus hours before feeling exhausted. Real-world motorcycle enthusiasts, however, frequently call out mechanical inaccuracies in the part naming, assembly logic, and disassembly sequences, noting that the game was clearly built without close consultation with anyone who has actually turned a spanner on a real bike. That gap between the word "Simulator" in the title and what the game actually simulates is a recurring source of frustration in player feedback, and five years post-launch some mission-breaking bugs remain unaddressed. The test drive segments are the weakest part across the board: the handling feels disconnected and the outdoor environments look noticeably cheaper than the garage itself, making the riding portion feel like an afterthought bolted onto what is otherwise a static workbench experience. From a sports-and-racing specialist perspective, I want to flag something the title card implies but the game does not deliver: this is not a riding game. There is no split-screen, no multiplayer of any kind, no racing, no satisfaction of feeling a tuned machine through a gamepad's rumble motors. It is a solo puzzle-and-management sim that happens to involve motorcycles. Mouse and keyboard on PC is the correct input method by a significant margin. The UI was designed around cursor precision, and the parts catalogue search is clunky enough that navigating it with a controller becomes a chore. If you are on PC and already enjoy the genre, the controls are workable and the experience is at its best here. If you are a hardcore motorcycle person expecting technical fidelity, temper expectations hard. If you want a low-pressure way to spend an evening quietly rebuilding a chopper while something plays in the background, there is a genuine rhythm to it once the loop clicks. Riley, Scout Team

Motorcycle Mechanic Simulator 2021

Motorcycle Mechanic Simulator 2021

17 nov 2021Play2Chill S.A.
GamerScout opina

Scratch the itch of stripping a bike down to its last bolt, but go in knowing the 67% Mixed score on Steam is not the whole story: patient sim fans get a zen loop, everyone else hits a wall fast.

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My first honest reaction to Motorcycle Mechanic Simulator 2021 was something like cautious interest followed by a slow, dawning realisation that the game is painfully aware of its own niche and absolutely refuses to stretch beyond it. You start in a home garage taking customer jobs, graduate to a bigger workshop, strip motorcycles down to individual components, source cheap salvage from the junkyard, and eventually auction off your own custom builds. On paper it reads like a two-wheeled cousin of the Car Mechanic Simulator formula, and the lineage is obvious enough that the comparison is unavoidable. The repair loop itself is the strongest argument for buying this. Each job arrives as a customer mail with a brief description of the problem, and the optional bonus objectives, where a client vaguely mentions the engine stalling or losing power, are genuinely the most satisfying moments. Hunting down a worn air flow meter or a degraded gasket by methodically inspecting components actually feels like problem-solving rather than a checklist. The disassembly model requires you to remove surrounding parts in the correct order before you can reach deeper components, and a maintenance mode lets you check fluid levels, component condition, and whether the engine will turn over before you hand the bike back. The junkyard adds a light economic layer: pay a small entry fee, scavenge randomised second-hand parts at a discount, and flip restored wrecks at auction once you hit the relevant experience threshold. The customisation side is deeper than it first looks, with a wide palette of paintable panels and a sandbox mode that unlocks everything for free-form builds. Here is where it gets complicated. The game sits at a Mixed rating on Steam, and that split reflects two very different types of player colliding with the same product. Casual sim fans who just want to unwind find a slow, meditative experience that can clock twenty-plus hours before feeling exhausted. Real-world motorcycle enthusiasts, however, frequently call out mechanical inaccuracies in the part naming, assembly logic, and disassembly sequences, noting that the game was clearly built without close consultation with anyone who has actually turned a spanner on a real bike. That gap between the word "Simulator" in the title and what the game actually simulates is a recurring source of frustration in player feedback, and five years post-launch some mission-breaking bugs remain unaddressed. The test drive segments are the weakest part across the board: the handling feels disconnected and the outdoor environments look noticeably cheaper than the garage itself, making the riding portion feel like an afterthought bolted onto what is otherwise a static workbench experience. From a sports-and-racing specialist perspective, I want to flag something the title card implies but the game does not deliver: this is not a riding game. There is no split-screen, no multiplayer of any kind, no racing, no satisfaction of feeling a tuned machine through a gamepad's rumble motors. It is a solo puzzle-and-management sim that happens to involve motorcycles. Mouse and keyboard on PC is the correct input method by a significant margin. The UI was designed around cursor precision, and the parts catalogue search is clunky enough that navigating it with a controller becomes a chore. If you are on PC and already enjoy the genre, the controls are workable and the experience is at its best here. If you are a hardcore motorcycle person expecting technical fidelity, temper expectations hard. If you want a low-pressure way to spend an evening quietly rebuilding a chopper while something plays in the background, there is a genuine rhythm to it once the loop clicks.

Riley
Riley · Scout Team

Sports & racing

Etiquetas

steamMechanic SimSingle-Player OnlyJunkyard SalvageBike CustomisationSandbox ModeMouse-and-Keyboard BestMission-BasedSlow BurnNo Multiplayer

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

Processor
Intel Core i5 3.4 GHz
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
NVidia GeForce GTX760 2GB
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
20 GB available space Addit…

Recomendados

Processor
Intel Core i7
Memory
16 GB RAM
Graphics
NVidia GeForce GTX 1060 4GB
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
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Reseñas y valoraciones

Steam
67%(1,787)

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Play2Chill S.A.
Distribuidora
Play2Chill S.A.
Fecha de lanzamiento
17 nov 2021

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Motorcycle Mechanic Simulator 2021?

Motorcycle Mechanic Simulator 2021 está disponible en PC, Xbox.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Motorcycle Mechanic Simulator 2021?

Motorcycle Mechanic Simulator 2021 se lanzó el 17 de noviembre de 2021.

¿Quién desarrolló Motorcycle Mechanic Simulator 2021?

Motorcycle Mechanic Simulator 2021 fue desarrollado por Play2Chill S.A..