PC Building Simulator - Republic of Gamers Workshop (DLC)
Complemento / DLC de PC Building Simulator — ver juego completoSwap out stock coolers for ROG hardware in this official ASUS Republic of Gamers workshop expansion. Niche, but the licensed parts are the real draw.
Comparar precios(0 tiendas)
Cargando precios...
We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.
Historial de precios
Capturas y multimedia
Acerca de PC Building Simulator - Republic of Gamers Workshop (DLC)
PC Building Simulator's Republic of Gamers Workshop DLC is a content drop squarely aimed at players who already know what an M.2 slot is and have opinions about RGB sync software. It layers an official ASUS ROG-branded workshop skin and a set of licensed ROG components on top of the base game's repair-and-build loop, giving you a curated selection of real-world motherboards, GPUs, cases, and cooling hardware to work with. If you came to the base game partly for the product authenticity, this DLC is a logical next purchase. For newcomers wondering what the base game even is: PC Building Simulator is a first-person workshop game where you take repair tickets, diagnose failing systems, swap components, manage cable routing, and eventually free-build your own rigs. The tutorial is patient and well-paced, and the game does a solid job of labeling ports and explaining compatibility rules without making you feel talked down to. The ROG DLC slots into that same framework, adding branded assets rather than new mechanical systems. You are not getting new mission types or a restructured progression tree, just a themed layer. From a build-depth standpoint, the ROG hardware selection is respectable. The components reflect real product lines and carry accurate specs, which matters if you are using the game as a low-stakes way to learn part selection before spending real money on a build. Clearance checks, thermal paste application, and POST troubleshooting all behave the same as the base game. The workshop itself gets a visual overhaul that feels polished rather than purely cosmetic, with ROG branding worked into the environment in a way that stops short of feeling like a four-hour advertisement. The honest limitation here is scope. This is a relatively small DLC with a focused component library, and if you are already deep into the base game with the other manufacturer workshop DLCs, you will exhaust the new content faster than you might expect. The ROG pieces integrate cleanly with parts from other expansions, so free-building a mixed-brand monster rig is fully supported. But if you are hoping for new gameplay hooks, a separate story arc, or expanded AI customer behavior, none of that is here. The value lives entirely in the licensed hardware catalog and the workshop aesthetic. As a strategy-and-sim player, what I care about most in any sim is whether the systems have enough fidelity to produce meaningful decisions. PC Building Simulator as a whole delivers that, and the ROG DLC does not dilute it. Picking between two ROG boards for a given socket, weighing thermal headroom against budget constraints (in-game budget, not yours), and planning a build around a specific ROG case's airflow layout all require real judgment. The mod ecosystem for the base game is active, and the DLC components work fine alongside community-added parts. If you are collecting workshops or specifically want ROG hardware in your virtual builds, this is the cleanest way to get it.

Strategy & simulation
Etiquetas
Requisitos del sistema
Mínimos
- Processor
- Intel Core i5-2500K or AMD Athlon X4 740 (or equivalent)
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- Graphics
- GeForce GTX 660 (2048 MB) or Radeon R9 285 (2048 MB) - Integrated GPUs may work but ar…
Sigue explorando
Community Discussion
Be the first to comment on PC Building Simulator - Republic of Gamers Workshop (DLC).
Reseñas y valoraciones
Información del juego
- Desarrolladora
- Claudiu Kiss
- Distribuidora
- The Irregular Corporation
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- 29 ene 2019
