Compare Bus Simulator 21 prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by stillalive studios. Published by astragon Entertainment. Released on 9/7/2021. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Simulation. Metacritic score: 75/100.

Bus Simulator 21 puts you behind the wheel of licensed buses across two open-world cities, but rough AI and optimization issues keep it from being a smooth ride.

Bus Simulator 21 is exactly what it says on the tin: you drive buses, you follow routes, you open doors, you wait for passengers to shuffle on and off, and then you do it again. If that sounds meditative rather than boring to you, stillalive studios has built a reasonably wide sandbox around that loop. Two open-world maps - Angel Shores and Seaside Valley - give you a decent amount of tarmac to cover, and the roster of officially licensed buses from manufacturers like Mercedes-Benz, MAN, Volvo, and others is the headline feature the developers clearly spent real money on. Watching the interior details of a properly licensed double-decker is genuinely satisfying if you care about that sort of thing. From a systems perspective, the game is more layered than a first glance suggests. You are not just a driver - you are also a bus company operator. You hire AI drivers, assign them to routes, manage your fleet, expand your network, and watch the balance sheet. This is where my spreadsheet-brain starts paying attention. The route-planning and company-management layer gives the game a light transport-tycoon quality that elevates it above pure vehicle simulation. Setting up a profitable network across Angel Shores, timing your driver schedules to cover peak hours, and gradually unlocking longer routes creates a genuine progression loop. Newcomers should lean into that management side early because the driving itself, while solid enough, has limited mechanical depth on its own. Here is where honesty becomes necessary. The Mixed review score on Steam is earned. AI traffic behavior is inconsistent and can actively obstruct your routes in ways that feel less like realistic city chaos and more like placeholder pathfinding. The passenger AI boarding sequences occasionally glitch, and the game shipped with performance issues that patches have only partially addressed. The multiplayer co-op mode - which lets you and friends run a shared bus company - is a genuinely good idea that suffered from connectivity problems at launch. Reports suggest it has stabilized somewhat, but it remains the feature most likely to frustrate. If co-op is your primary reason for buying, verify current community feedback before committing. The mod ecosystem is a meaningful saving grace. The Steam Workshop support is active and the community has added new maps, buses, liveries, and quality-of-life improvements that address some of the stock game's shortcomings. If you are willing to spend thirty minutes curating a mod list before your first session, you will have a noticeably better experience than a default install delivers. This is not an excuse for the base game's rough edges, but it is a realistic factor in the total package. For a strategy-minded player, think of the Workshop as a free expansion pass with variable quality control. Bus Simulator 21 is built for a specific kind of player: someone who genuinely enjoys the operational puzzle of a transit network, does not mind repetitive driving as background rhythm to the management decisions, and has patience for simulation-genre roughness. It is not a showcase of technical excellence. The AI and optimization gaps are real. But if you have bounced around transport management games and wanted something where you can also manually drive your own fleet, this is one of the few titles that combines both sides of that fantasy with licensed vehicles and two reasonably sized maps to work across. Diego, Scout Team

Bus Simulator 21

Bus Simulator 21

Sep 7, 2021stillalive studiosastragon Entertainment
GamerScout Says

Bus Simulator 21 puts you behind the wheel of licensed buses across two open-world cities, but rough AI and optimization issues keep it from being a smooth ride.

PCXbox
Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum
Best Price Available
€0.00
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Historical low: €1.49

GamerScout Verdict

Best for transit-management fans who want to drive their own fleet, provided they go in mod-ready and with tempered expectations on AI quality.

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Price History

Historical low
€1.495 Jun 2026
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€1.43€1.64€1.84€2.055 Jun13 Jun21 Jun28 Jun6 Jul
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Screenshots & Media

About Bus Simulator 21

Bus Simulator 21 is exactly what it says on the tin: you drive buses, you follow routes, you open doors, you wait for passengers to shuffle on and off, and then you do it again. If that sounds meditative rather than boring to you, stillalive studios has built a reasonably wide sandbox around that loop. Two open-world maps - Angel Shores and Seaside Valley - give you a decent amount of tarmac to cover, and the roster of officially licensed buses from manufacturers like Mercedes-Benz, MAN, Volvo, and others is the headline feature the developers clearly spent real money on. Watching the interior details of a properly licensed double-decker is genuinely satisfying if you care about that sort of thing. From a systems perspective, the game is more layered than a first glance suggests. You are not just a driver - you are also a bus company operator. You hire AI drivers, assign them to routes, manage your fleet, expand your network, and watch the balance sheet. This is where my spreadsheet-brain starts paying attention. The route-planning and company-management layer gives the game a light transport-tycoon quality that elevates it above pure vehicle simulation. Setting up a profitable network across Angel Shores, timing your driver schedules to cover peak hours, and gradually unlocking longer routes creates a genuine progression loop. Newcomers should lean into that management side early because the driving itself, while solid enough, has limited mechanical depth on its own. Here is where honesty becomes necessary. The Mixed review score on Steam is earned. AI traffic behavior is inconsistent and can actively obstruct your routes in ways that feel less like realistic city chaos and more like placeholder pathfinding. The passenger AI boarding sequences occasionally glitch, and the game shipped with performance issues that patches have only partially addressed. The multiplayer co-op mode - which lets you and friends run a shared bus company - is a genuinely good idea that suffered from connectivity problems at launch. Reports suggest it has stabilized somewhat, but it remains the feature most likely to frustrate. If co-op is your primary reason for buying, verify current community feedback before committing. The mod ecosystem is a meaningful saving grace. The Steam Workshop support is active and the community has added new maps, buses, liveries, and quality-of-life improvements that address some of the stock game's shortcomings. If you are willing to spend thirty minutes curating a mod list before your first session, you will have a noticeably better experience than a default install delivers. This is not an excuse for the base game's rough edges, but it is a realistic factor in the total package. For a strategy-minded player, think of the Workshop as a free expansion pass with variable quality control. Bus Simulator 21 is built for a specific kind of player: someone who genuinely enjoys the operational puzzle of a transit network, does not mind repetitive driving as background rhythm to the management decisions, and has patience for simulation-genre roughness. It is not a showcase of technical excellence. The AI and optimization gaps are real. But if you have bounced around transport management games and wanted something where you can also manually drive your own fleet, this is one of the few titles that combines both sides of that fantasy with licensed vehicles and two reasonably sized maps to work across.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Tags

steamFleet ManagementRoute PlanningOpen World CityCo-op MultiplayerWorkshop SupportTransport Tycoon ElementsLicensed VehiclesCompany Progression

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 64-Bit
Processor
Intel Core i3-2120 / AMD Phenom II X4 830 or equivalent
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 760 (2GB VRAM) / AMD Radeon R9 280…

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 64-Bit
Processor
Intel Core i5-4440 / AMD FC-8140 or equivalent
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1070 (8GB VRAM) / AMD Radeo…

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Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
75
Steam
70%(6,504)

Game Info

Developer
stillalive studios
Publisher
astragon Entertainment
Release Date
Sep 7, 2021

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Frequently asked questions about Bus Simulator 21

How much does Bus Simulator 21 cost?

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What platforms is Bus Simulator 21 available on?

Bus Simulator 21 is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Bus Simulator 21 released?

Bus Simulator 21 was released on 7 September 2021.

Who developed Bus Simulator 21?

Bus Simulator 21 was developed by stillalive studios and published by astragon Entertainment.

Is Bus Simulator 21 worth buying?

Bus Simulator 21 holds a Metacritic score of 75/100, making it one of the standout Simulation titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.