Compare American Truck Simulator - Oklahoma prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by SCS Software. Published by SCS Software. Released on 8/1/2023. Available on PC. Genres: Indie, Simulation.

Oklahoma drops a new 5-state-sized chunk of the south-central US into ATS, trading mountain drama for rolling plains, oil fields, and genuinely underrated city detail.

American Truck Simulator - Oklahoma is a paid map expansion for SCS Software's long-running trucking sim, adding the Sooner State as a drivable region connected to the existing ATS road network. If you already own the base game and a handful of neighboring state DLCs, Oklahoma slips in naturally as a logical corridor between Texas, Kansas, and the wider midwest. If you are brand new to ATS, this is not your entry point - grab the base game and maybe California or Texas first, then circle back. What Oklahoma brings to the table is a particular kind of quiet variety. The eastern edges push into Ozark-adjacent green hills and dense treelines, while the central and western stretches open into that broad, sky-dominated plains landscape the state is actually known for. The oil derricks are here. The red dirt is here. Oklahoma City and Tulsa both get reasonable representations with recognizable landmarks and enough downtown density to make low-speed urban navigation feel like actual work rather than an empty backdrop. SCS has been iterating on city detail for years and it shows - these are not placeholder boxes with gas station textures slapped on. On the critical side, the 78 percent positive Steam score with only 437 reviews at time of writing signals a niche-within-a-niche situation. Long-haul ATS players who have been filling out their map for years will find Oklahoma a solid addition. Players who expected Oklahoma to dramatically change gameplay loop will be disappointed, because it does not. The road variety leans heavily on two-lane state highways and interstate stretches rather than anything technically demanding. There are no mountain passes, no hairpin switchbacks. This is a relaxed, atmospheric drive state, and whether that is a selling point or a dealbreaker tells you everything about whether you should buy it. From a sim-depth perspective, the new cargo routes that open up when Oklahoma is in your map give freight economy players more routing options, which genuinely matters if you run a virtual trucking company in the game's career mode or use external economy mods. The mod ecosystem around ATS is healthy enough that third-party traffic, weather, and sound overhaul mods will layer on top of Oklahoma just like any other state, so the floor for experience quality scales with how much you have already invested in your ATS setup. SCS's own trailer and cargo DLCs also interact here, with agricultural and oil-sector loads feeling particularly at home in this geography. Bottom line: Oklahoma is a competent, faithfully rendered state expansion for committed ATS players who want a complete US map. It does not reinvent anything, and the mixed-leaning score mostly reflects that some buyers wanted more spectacle from the landscape. For the methodical, miles-accumulating trucker who finds satisfaction in watching a new state fill in on the logbook, it delivers exactly what it promises. Diego, Scout Team

American Truck Simulator - Oklahoma
IndieSimulation

American Truck Simulator - Oklahoma

Aug 1, 2023SCS Software
GamerScout Says

Oklahoma drops a new 5-state-sized chunk of the south-central US into ATS, trading mountain drama for rolling plains, oil fields, and genuinely underrated city detail.

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About American Truck Simulator - Oklahoma

American Truck Simulator - Oklahoma is a paid map expansion for SCS Software's long-running trucking sim, adding the Sooner State as a drivable region connected to the existing ATS road network. If you already own the base game and a handful of neighboring state DLCs, Oklahoma slips in naturally as a logical corridor between Texas, Kansas, and the wider midwest. If you are brand new to ATS, this is not your entry point - grab the base game and maybe California or Texas first, then circle back. What Oklahoma brings to the table is a particular kind of quiet variety. The eastern edges push into Ozark-adjacent green hills and dense treelines, while the central and western stretches open into that broad, sky-dominated plains landscape the state is actually known for. The oil derricks are here. The red dirt is here. Oklahoma City and Tulsa both get reasonable representations with recognizable landmarks and enough downtown density to make low-speed urban navigation feel like actual work rather than an empty backdrop. SCS has been iterating on city detail for years and it shows - these are not placeholder boxes with gas station textures slapped on. On the critical side, the 78 percent positive Steam score with only 437 reviews at time of writing signals a niche-within-a-niche situation. Long-haul ATS players who have been filling out their map for years will find Oklahoma a solid addition. Players who expected Oklahoma to dramatically change gameplay loop will be disappointed, because it does not. The road variety leans heavily on two-lane state highways and interstate stretches rather than anything technically demanding. There are no mountain passes, no hairpin switchbacks. This is a relaxed, atmospheric drive state, and whether that is a selling point or a dealbreaker tells you everything about whether you should buy it. From a sim-depth perspective, the new cargo routes that open up when Oklahoma is in your map give freight economy players more routing options, which genuinely matters if you run a virtual trucking company in the game's career mode or use external economy mods. The mod ecosystem around ATS is healthy enough that third-party traffic, weather, and sound overhaul mods will layer on top of Oklahoma just like any other state, so the floor for experience quality scales with how much you have already invested in your ATS setup. SCS's own trailer and cargo DLCs also interact here, with agricultural and oil-sector loads feeling particularly at home in this geography. Bottom line: Oklahoma is a competent, faithfully rendered state expansion for committed ATS players who want a complete US map. It does not reinvent anything, and the mixed-leaning score mostly reflects that some buyers wanted more spectacle from the landscape. For the methodical, miles-accumulating trucker who finds satisfaction in watching a new state fill in on the logbook, it delivers exactly what it promises. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamMap ExpansionOpen RoadCareer ModeFreight EconomyAtmospheric DrivingMod-FriendlyLong Haul

System Requirements

System requirements for American Truck Simulator - Oklahoma aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Steam
78%(437)

Game Info

Developer
SCS Software
Publisher
SCS Software
Release Date
Aug 1, 2023

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