Compara los precios de Omsi 2: Bus Simulator en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por MR-Software GbR. Publicado por Aerosoft GmbH. Lanzado el 11/12/2013. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Single Player, First Person, Simulation.

A first-person bus sim built around obsessive mechanical detail: cold-start procedures, air pressure gauges, fare change, and timetable pressure across real-world Berlin routes. Not for everyone, but nothing else comes close for genre purists.

OMSI 2 is a first-person, single-player bus simulator that drops you behind the wheel of classic West Berlin omnibuses, most famously the MAN SD200 and SD202 double-deckers and the articulated MAN NG272 bendy bus, across recreated Spandau routes set between 1986 and 1994. The chronology system is genuinely clever: the map physically changes as the years tick forward, reflecting road layouts, signage, and vehicle assignments that shifted after German reunification. You select a line, accept a tour plan, and your job is to hit stops on time, give correct change to passengers, manage air pressure, monitor cabin temperature, and nurse a heavy diesel engine that does not want to pull a full load uphill in third gear. That weight, inertia, and engine response is the whole argument for this game's existence. No other bus title replicates it with the same fidelity. The base game's content budget is genuinely thin: one main map, two principal lines (5 and 92), and a short tutorial zone. That is not a deal-breaker, but it is the number you need to accept going in. The real breadth of OMSI 2 lives entirely in the mod ecosystem. The publisher-supported OMSI-WebDisk portal offers unlimited free downloads, and independent sites add buses from South Korea, Russia, Belgium, and the UK alongside city maps spanning Lincoln, Vienna, Hamburg, and well beyond. Community modders have been the ones keeping this game's content pipeline alive since official development slowed significantly. Installing mods is entirely manual, involving folder drops and occasional community patches, including an unofficial 4GB memory fix that should be considered mandatory on any modern Windows install. That friction is real, and newcomers absolutely should expect an hour of setup before a smooth first drive. Performance is the other honest caveat. The engine is old, CPU-bound, and does not scale across multiple cores efficiently. Dense city-centre map sections can slide into the low twenties framerate even on hardware that would push triple digits in a modern title. A steering wheel with force feedback, ideally 900 degrees of rotation, transforms the experience from interesting to genuinely absorbing. Mouse and keyboard input works but flattens the weight-transfer feel that makes the physics worth talking about. TrackIR is also supported for head-tracking in the cab. Now, is this a beginner-friendly purchase approached correctly? Yes, actually. The in-game tutorial covers the MAN SD200 startup sequence step by step, and the community has produced detailed written and video guides for every subsequent system. There is no progression system, no unlocks, no economy pressure. You pick a bus, pick a map, pick a line, and drive. Fail the timetable, learn the route better, try again. The complexity ceiling is high but the entry point is a single door-open button and a key turn. Strategy-game veterans used to reading manuals before launching will settle in faster than the comparison to Bus Simulator 21's one-click ignition would suggest. The AI traffic has real limitations, stopping statically rather than routing around you, which breaks immersion on crowded routes, and parts of the UI remain in German, which creates friction for non-German speakers when setting up custom tour assignments. Those are genuine rough edges on a game that has not received substantive developer patches in years. Diego, Scout Team

Omsi 2: Bus Simulator
Single PlayerFirst PersonSimulation

Omsi 2: Bus Simulator

11 dic 2013MR-Software GbRAerosoft GmbH
GamerScout opina

A first-person bus sim built around obsessive mechanical detail: cold-start procedures, air pressure gauges, fare change, and timetable pressure across real-world Berlin routes. Not for everyone, but nothing else comes close for genre purists.

PC
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OMSI 2 is a first-person, single-player bus simulator that drops you behind the wheel of classic West Berlin omnibuses, most famously the MAN SD200 and SD202 double-deckers and the articulated MAN NG272 bendy bus, across recreated Spandau routes set between 1986 and 1994. The chronology system is genuinely clever: the map physically changes as the years tick forward, reflecting road layouts, signage, and vehicle assignments that shifted after German reunification. You select a line, accept a tour plan, and your job is to hit stops on time, give correct change to passengers, manage air pressure, monitor cabin temperature, and nurse a heavy diesel engine that does not want to pull a full load uphill in third gear. That weight, inertia, and engine response is the whole argument for this game's existence. No other bus title replicates it with the same fidelity. The base game's content budget is genuinely thin: one main map, two principal lines (5 and 92), and a short tutorial zone. That is not a deal-breaker, but it is the number you need to accept going in. The real breadth of OMSI 2 lives entirely in the mod ecosystem. The publisher-supported OMSI-WebDisk portal offers unlimited free downloads, and independent sites add buses from South Korea, Russia, Belgium, and the UK alongside city maps spanning Lincoln, Vienna, Hamburg, and well beyond. Community modders have been the ones keeping this game's content pipeline alive since official development slowed significantly. Installing mods is entirely manual, involving folder drops and occasional community patches, including an unofficial 4GB memory fix that should be considered mandatory on any modern Windows install. That friction is real, and newcomers absolutely should expect an hour of setup before a smooth first drive. Performance is the other honest caveat. The engine is old, CPU-bound, and does not scale across multiple cores efficiently. Dense city-centre map sections can slide into the low twenties framerate even on hardware that would push triple digits in a modern title. A steering wheel with force feedback, ideally 900 degrees of rotation, transforms the experience from interesting to genuinely absorbing. Mouse and keyboard input works but flattens the weight-transfer feel that makes the physics worth talking about. TrackIR is also supported for head-tracking in the cab. Now, is this a beginner-friendly purchase approached correctly? Yes, actually. The in-game tutorial covers the MAN SD200 startup sequence step by step, and the community has produced detailed written and video guides for every subsequent system. There is no progression system, no unlocks, no economy pressure. You pick a bus, pick a map, pick a line, and drive. Fail the timetable, learn the route better, try again. The complexity ceiling is high but the entry point is a single door-open button and a key turn. Strategy-game veterans used to reading manuals before launching will settle in faster than the comparison to Bus Simulator 21's one-click ignition would suggest. The AI traffic has real limitations, stopping statically rather than routing around you, which breaks immersion on crowded routes, and parts of the UI remain in German, which creates friction for non-German speakers when setting up custom tour assignments. Those are genuine rough edges on a game that has not received substantive developer patches in years.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Etiquetas

steamHardcore SimulationManual TransmissionChronology SystemTrackIR SupportMod-Dependent ContentSteering Wheel RecommendedHistorical SettingTimetable Management

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

Memory
2 GB RAM
Graphics
GeForce AMDimum 512 MB
Processor
2.6 GHz
System requirements
Windows 7/8

Recomendados

Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
GeForce AMD 1024 MB
Processor
Dual core 2.8 GHz
System requirements
Windows 7/8

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
MR-Software GbR
Distribuidora
Aerosoft GmbH
Fecha de lanzamiento
11 dic 2013

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Omsi 2: Bus Simulator?

Omsi 2: Bus Simulator está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Omsi 2: Bus Simulator?

Omsi 2: Bus Simulator se lanzó el 11 de diciembre de 2013.

¿Quién desarrolló Omsi 2: Bus Simulator?

Omsi 2: Bus Simulator fue desarrollado por MR-Software GbR y publicado por Aerosoft GmbH.