Compara los precios de Train Valley World en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Flazm. Publicado por tinyBuild. Lanzado el 9/8/2024. Disponible en PC, Mac. Géneros: Indie, Simulation, Strategy.

Satisfying logistics puzzles wrapped in a tycoon shell - if optimising multi-stop supply chains through pause-and-plan track-laying sounds like your idea of a good evening, this one delivers.

I have a soft spot for any game that makes me reach for graph paper, and Train Valley World had me sketching rail layouts within the first twenty minutes. The core loop is tighter than its tycoon label suggests: each of the game's levels drops you on a map peppered with resource nodes, factories, and city stations, and your job is to connect them into a functioning supply chain using freely placed track. Raw timber needs to reach a mill before finished lumber can reach the city; mines feed smelters that feed shipyards. Getting those production chains humming without bottlenecking your whole network is genuinely absorbing puzzle work, and the pause-at-any-moment feature means you can plan your next junction without the simulation running away from you. The series has evolved deliberately across three entries. The original Train Valley was primarily a reflex game about avoiding collisions; Train Valley 2 shifted toward logistics management but kept some of that traffic-juggling anxiety. Train Valley World removes train collisions entirely, letting two trains share a line with one simply yielding to the other. That single design call changes the feel considerably: you are now a network planner, not a traffic cop. The freed mental bandwidth goes into smarter route design and into the new specialists system, where you recruit named advisors who ride specific locomotives and grant bonuses such as extra cargo capacity, higher speed, or elevated passenger revenue. Each specialist must be re-hired per level and can only crew one train at a time, so assigning them well is a genuine decision with real trade-offs. For newcomers to this kind of game, Train Valley World is a reasonable entry point, though with a caveat. The tutorial is lighter than I would like - it covers the basics but leaves players to discover the finer points of pathing and production chains on their own. Stick with it through the first three or four levels and the systems click into place. Difficulty-seekers should note the game is not punishing by default: the three optional star objectives per level add a sharper challenge layer, with goals like speed completions or bridge-count limits, but the base experience allows experimentation without financial death spirals. The campaign spans 16 single-player levels and 6 multiplayer scenarios, which is notably leaner than Train Valley 2, and some players will chew through the solo content in a focused weekend session. Multiplayer is where the game's ambition outruns its execution a little. You can run co-operative sessions with up to four players on a shared map, or pivot into competitive play where sabotaging your rivals is on the table. The concept is compelling. The implementation, however, has drawn some community complaints about pathing bugs and post-patch connectivity issues. It is functional but feels like the rougher edge of an otherwise polished release. On the single-player side, the bigger ongoing frustration is train pathfinding: when you lay multiple routes to a destination, trains occasionally pick the least sensible one, and manually overriding that via checkpoints is clunkier than it should be. The level editor does a lot of heavy lifting on the longevity question. Flazm shipped a capable scripting toolkit, and the Train Valley 2 community proved that player-made maps can substantially extend a game's lifespan, so the odds are reasonable that workshop content keeps this one alive past the base campaign. Diego, Scout Team

Train Valley World

Train Valley World

9 ago 2024FlazmtinyBuild
GamerScout opina

Satisfying logistics puzzles wrapped in a tycoon shell - if optimising multi-stop supply chains through pause-and-plan track-laying sounds like your idea of a good evening, this one delivers.

PCMac
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Platinum
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Mínimo histórico: €2.72

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I have a soft spot for any game that makes me reach for graph paper, and Train Valley World had me sketching rail layouts within the first twenty minutes. The core loop is tighter than its tycoon label suggests: each of the game's levels drops you on a map peppered with resource nodes, factories, and city stations, and your job is to connect them into a functioning supply chain using freely placed track. Raw timber needs to reach a mill before finished lumber can reach the city; mines feed smelters that feed shipyards. Getting those production chains humming without bottlenecking your whole network is genuinely absorbing puzzle work, and the pause-at-any-moment feature means you can plan your next junction without the simulation running away from you. The series has evolved deliberately across three entries. The original Train Valley was primarily a reflex game about avoiding collisions; Train Valley 2 shifted toward logistics management but kept some of that traffic-juggling anxiety. Train Valley World removes train collisions entirely, letting two trains share a line with one simply yielding to the other. That single design call changes the feel considerably: you are now a network planner, not a traffic cop. The freed mental bandwidth goes into smarter route design and into the new specialists system, where you recruit named advisors who ride specific locomotives and grant bonuses such as extra cargo capacity, higher speed, or elevated passenger revenue. Each specialist must be re-hired per level and can only crew one train at a time, so assigning them well is a genuine decision with real trade-offs. For newcomers to this kind of game, Train Valley World is a reasonable entry point, though with a caveat. The tutorial is lighter than I would like - it covers the basics but leaves players to discover the finer points of pathing and production chains on their own. Stick with it through the first three or four levels and the systems click into place. Difficulty-seekers should note the game is not punishing by default: the three optional star objectives per level add a sharper challenge layer, with goals like speed completions or bridge-count limits, but the base experience allows experimentation without financial death spirals. The campaign spans 16 single-player levels and 6 multiplayer scenarios, which is notably leaner than Train Valley 2, and some players will chew through the solo content in a focused weekend session. Multiplayer is where the game's ambition outruns its execution a little. You can run co-operative sessions with up to four players on a shared map, or pivot into competitive play where sabotaging your rivals is on the table. The concept is compelling. The implementation, however, has drawn some community complaints about pathing bugs and post-patch connectivity issues. It is functional but feels like the rougher edge of an otherwise polished release. On the single-player side, the bigger ongoing frustration is train pathfinding: when you lay multiple routes to a destination, trains occasionally pick the least sensible one, and manually overriding that via checkpoints is clunkier than it should be. The level editor does a lot of heavy lifting on the longevity question. Flazm shipped a capable scripting toolkit, and the Train Valley 2 community proved that player-made maps can substantially extend a game's lifespan, so the odds are reasonable that workshop content keeps this one alive past the base campaign.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Etiquetas

singleplayermultiplayercooponline-coopachievementstrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Logistics PuzzleSupply ChainPause-and-PlanSpecialists SystemLevel EditorCompetitive Co-opRoute PlanningIndustrial Revolution Setting

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 10 x64
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
GTX 1050ti
Processor
i3-8100

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OS
Windows 10 x64
DirectX
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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Flazm
Distribuidora
tinyBuild
Fecha de lanzamiento
9 ago 2024

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Train Valley World?

Train Valley World está disponible en PC, Mac.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Train Valley World?

Train Valley World se lanzó el 9 de agosto de 2024.

¿Quién desarrolló Train Valley World?

Train Valley World fue desarrollado por Flazm y publicado por tinyBuild.