Airstrip DLC and Can Touch This DLC Bundle (DLC)
Two Gas Station Simulator DLCs in one bundle: Airstrip adds a story-driven aviation side-business, Can Touch This hands you a spray can and a furniture mover to overhaul your station's look.
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About Airstrip DLC and Can Touch This DLC Bundle (DLC)
This is a two-piece DLC bundle for Gas Station Simulator, the first-person desert-highway sim where you rebuild an abandoned roadside station from scrap heap to profitable enterprise. Neither piece here changes the core fuel-pump-and-shelf-stocking loop, but both chip in something the base game was noticeably thin on: lateral expansion and personal expression. If you are already sunk into the main game and wondering whether there is more to do, this bundle has a clear answer for each of those itches. The Airstrip content is the weightier of the two. It introduces a named NPC, Joe, an eccentric old pilot with a single-engine plane that, as the developers put it, has about as much high-tech kit as an LED reading light. Joe needs a place to land in the middle of nowhere, and you happen to sit on the ruins of a WWII-era military strip. The story hook is thin but functional: get the strip operational, stock aviation fuel, source plane parts, set up a windsock and runway lights, and occasionally guide Joe down manually when he calls in. The event-driven design is the smart call here. Unlike the base game's constant stream of customer demands, the airstrip content fires in discrete bursts that demand your full focus and cannot be handed off to employees. That rhythm suits players who want a secondary build target that does not just run itself in the background. The Steam reception on this one landed mixed, largely because expectations around how much content it delivered versus its price did not always align, so go in knowing it is a flavour extension, not a full expansion. Can Touch This is leaner and more cosmetic in scope. It adds a spray-paint tool with adjustable scale and rotation for slapping decals and murals across any surface in the station, plus interior layout tools that let you reposition furniture, cash registers, and trash cans. It also introduces a crowd-direction mechanic to manage customer queuing. On pure playtime it is the smaller piece, but if your brain runs on optimising floor plans and dressing up spaces, this is the slot it fills. Think of it as the decoration layer the base game always needed. As a bundle aimed at players already committed to Gas Station Simulator, the value math is straightforward: you get the two DLCs that together extend both the management depth (aviation side-ops) and the personalisation ceiling (spray tools, layout control). Neither piece is for someone still learning the base game's systems. Get comfortable with restocking, hiring staff, and managing the repair queue first. But once the core loop feels solved and you want a new build target or a creative outlet, this bundle delivers exactly that scope of content, nothing more, nothing less. The Airstrip DLC's mixed reception on Steam is worth keeping in mind as a signal about depth versus price expectations, but bundled together the two pieces complement each other better than either does alone. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- DRAGO Entertainment
- Publisher
- Movie Games S.A., HeartBeat Games
- Release Date
- May 31, 2024