Compare American Truck Simulator - Idaho (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by SCS Software. Published by SCS Software. Released on 2/2/2016. Available on PC. Genres: Indie, Simulation. Metacritic score: 76/100.

Idaho expands ATS with winding mountain passes, dense forests, and potato country - a quieter, moodier stretch of highway that rewards patient drivers.

American Truck Simulator - Idaho is a paid map expansion for the base game, adding the Gem State as a driveable region with its own cities, industries, and road network. If you already own ATS and have worn grooves into the California and Nevada routes, Idaho is the logical next stop. The terrain is the headline feature here: you get genuine elevation changes through the Rockies, logging roads that feel narrower than they have any right to be, and long open stretches across the Snake River Plain that make your mirrors feel like landscape paintings. SCS Software has a well-documented habit of obsessing over regional accuracy, and Idaho holds up to that standard. The rest stops look right. The exit signage looks right. The sky over Twin Falls at dusk looks uncomfortably right. From a logistics and progression standpoint, Idaho plugs cleanly into the existing job market. New cargo types tied to the state's agricultural and timber economies mean fresh contract variety - hauling potato starch and lumber feels meaningfully different from the container and fuel runs that dominate the coastal routes. If you run a virtual trucking company with the in-game manager, the new depots give your fleet genuine expansion options rather than just more of the same geography. The city count is modest - Boise, Pocatello, Twin Falls, Coeur d'Alene, and a handful of smaller stops - which keeps the DLC feeling focused rather than bloated. The honest caveat is scale. Idaho is a large state in reality, but SCS compresses its map to keep drive times reasonable, so if you were hoping for a 45-minute haul through uninterrupted wilderness, you will hit a loading screen or a city boundary sooner than the real geography implies. That compression is a design choice baked into the entire ATS engine, not an Idaho-specific shortcut, but it is worth knowing before you buy expecting pure open-road solitude. The AI traffic and road event density also feel thinner outside the main corridors, which is realistic but can tip quiet routes into feeling a bit empty during off-peak hours. For newcomers who somehow landed here without the base game: ATS as a whole is a genuinely accessible simulation. There is a full difficulty scaling system, assists for coupling trailers and managing fuel stops, and the core loop of pick up cargo, drive carefully, get paid is as close to a zero-barrier entry point as a sim gets. Idaho does not change any of that. You install it, the region unlocks, and you start seeing Idaho job offers in your dispatch board. No separate tutorial, no new control scheme. If the base game clicked for you, Idaho simply gives you more of what clicked. The 97 percent positive Steam rating across a very large review pool is not an accident. SCS has been updating and polishing these map DLCs post-launch, and Idaho has received geometry and asset updates since its original release. For a map-focused expansion, longevity depends almost entirely on how much you enjoy the driving loop itself. If hauling cargo through varied terrain while a country radio station plays is your version of a decompression ritual, Idaho earns its place in your library without much debate. Diego, Scout Team

American Truck Simulator - Idaho (DLC)
IndieSimulation

American Truck Simulator - Idaho (DLC)

Feb 2, 2016SCS Software
GamerScout Says

Idaho expands ATS with winding mountain passes, dense forests, and potato country - a quieter, moodier stretch of highway that rewards patient drivers.

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About American Truck Simulator - Idaho (DLC)

American Truck Simulator - Idaho is a paid map expansion for the base game, adding the Gem State as a driveable region with its own cities, industries, and road network. If you already own ATS and have worn grooves into the California and Nevada routes, Idaho is the logical next stop. The terrain is the headline feature here: you get genuine elevation changes through the Rockies, logging roads that feel narrower than they have any right to be, and long open stretches across the Snake River Plain that make your mirrors feel like landscape paintings. SCS Software has a well-documented habit of obsessing over regional accuracy, and Idaho holds up to that standard. The rest stops look right. The exit signage looks right. The sky over Twin Falls at dusk looks uncomfortably right. From a logistics and progression standpoint, Idaho plugs cleanly into the existing job market. New cargo types tied to the state's agricultural and timber economies mean fresh contract variety - hauling potato starch and lumber feels meaningfully different from the container and fuel runs that dominate the coastal routes. If you run a virtual trucking company with the in-game manager, the new depots give your fleet genuine expansion options rather than just more of the same geography. The city count is modest - Boise, Pocatello, Twin Falls, Coeur d'Alene, and a handful of smaller stops - which keeps the DLC feeling focused rather than bloated. The honest caveat is scale. Idaho is a large state in reality, but SCS compresses its map to keep drive times reasonable, so if you were hoping for a 45-minute haul through uninterrupted wilderness, you will hit a loading screen or a city boundary sooner than the real geography implies. That compression is a design choice baked into the entire ATS engine, not an Idaho-specific shortcut, but it is worth knowing before you buy expecting pure open-road solitude. The AI traffic and road event density also feel thinner outside the main corridors, which is realistic but can tip quiet routes into feeling a bit empty during off-peak hours. For newcomers who somehow landed here without the base game: ATS as a whole is a genuinely accessible simulation. There is a full difficulty scaling system, assists for coupling trailers and managing fuel stops, and the core loop of pick up cargo, drive carefully, get paid is as close to a zero-barrier entry point as a sim gets. Idaho does not change any of that. You install it, the region unlocks, and you start seeing Idaho job offers in your dispatch board. No separate tutorial, no new control scheme. If the base game clicked for you, Idaho simply gives you more of what clicked. The 97 percent positive Steam rating across a very large review pool is not an accident. SCS has been updating and polishing these map DLCs post-launch, and Idaho has received geometry and asset updates since its original release. For a map-focused expansion, longevity depends almost entirely on how much you enjoy the driving loop itself. If hauling cargo through varied terrain while a country radio station plays is your version of a decompression ritual, Idaho earns its place in your library without much debate. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamMap ExpansionRelaxingAtmospheric DrivingCargo VarietyMountain RoadsCompany ManagementLong HaulRealistic Terrain

System Requirements

System requirements for American Truck Simulator - Idaho (DLC) aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
76
Steam
97%(191,284)

Game Info

Developer
SCS Software
Publisher
SCS Software
Release Date
Feb 2, 2016

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