Compare Bus Simulator 21 Extended Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by stillalive studios. Published by astragon Entertainment. Released on 9/7/2021. Available on PC. Genres: Simulation.

Drive 30 licensed buses across two maps, solo or with friends. It's the most complete entry in the series, with light management on the side.

Bus Simulator 21 Extended Edition is a niche but committed vehicle simulation that puts you behind the wheel of 30 officially licensed buses across two distinct maps. This is not a game about reflexes or combat. It is about timetables, route planning, passenger flow, and the oddly satisfying rhythm of stopping exactly on the marked line. If that sounds dull to you, this review is not going to change your mind. If it sounds weirdly appealing, read on. The core loop is straightforward: pick a route, drive the bus, collect fares, and return on schedule. The Extended Edition layers in management mechanics that let you step back from the wheel and run your own bus company, hiring drivers and expanding your fleet. It is not the deepest management sim on the market - fans of Transport Fever or Omsi 2 will find the business side relatively thin - but it provides enough decision-making to keep the experience from feeling like pure sightseeing. Route profitability, driver assignments, and fleet expansion create a soft progression loop that gives sessions a sense of forward momentum. The two maps offer meaningfully different driving contexts. One is a sprawling American-style city with wide roads and grid layouts. The other is a European setting with tighter turns and more variable terrain. Each map rewards learning its specific quirks, and the 30-bus roster means you will be swapping between different vehicle classes that handle noticeably differently. Articulated buses require real spatial awareness at turns. Smaller city buses feel nimble by comparison. The variety is genuine, not cosmetic. Online co-op is supported, which is a legitimate differentiator for the genre and adds a social dimension that competitors rarely bother with. Where the game struggles is in areas that matter to long-term play. The AI traffic and pedestrian behaviour is serviceable but not convincing under scrutiny. The management depth plateaus relatively quickly, and players expecting a transport empire builder will hit a ceiling sooner than they want. The tutorial covers the basics but assumes a degree of patience that not every player will bring. Mod support exists but is not as robust as what Omsi 2 has built over years of community development. That said, for a packaged, polished experience that requires no manual patching or community trawling to be enjoyable, Bus Simulator 21 Extended Edition is the cleaner entry point into bus sims. As someone who tracks depth-of-decision as a primary metric, I will be honest: this is not a spreadsheet game. The strategy layer is light. But the Extended Edition earns its place as the most complete retail bus simulation available, and the co-op feature alone separates it from most of its competition. Approach it as a relaxed routing game with a management wrapper and it delivers consistently. Approach it expecting Omsi-level depth or Cities Skylines-level planning complexity and you will be disappointed. Know what you are buying. Diego, Scout Team

Bus Simulator 21 Extended Edition
Simulation

Bus Simulator 21 Extended Edition

Sep 7, 2021stillalive studiosastragon Entertainment
GamerScout Says

Drive 30 licensed buses across two maps, solo or with friends. It's the most complete entry in the series, with light management on the side.

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About Bus Simulator 21 Extended Edition

Bus Simulator 21 Extended Edition is a niche but committed vehicle simulation that puts you behind the wheel of 30 officially licensed buses across two distinct maps. This is not a game about reflexes or combat. It is about timetables, route planning, passenger flow, and the oddly satisfying rhythm of stopping exactly on the marked line. If that sounds dull to you, this review is not going to change your mind. If it sounds weirdly appealing, read on. The core loop is straightforward: pick a route, drive the bus, collect fares, and return on schedule. The Extended Edition layers in management mechanics that let you step back from the wheel and run your own bus company, hiring drivers and expanding your fleet. It is not the deepest management sim on the market - fans of Transport Fever or Omsi 2 will find the business side relatively thin - but it provides enough decision-making to keep the experience from feeling like pure sightseeing. Route profitability, driver assignments, and fleet expansion create a soft progression loop that gives sessions a sense of forward momentum. The two maps offer meaningfully different driving contexts. One is a sprawling American-style city with wide roads and grid layouts. The other is a European setting with tighter turns and more variable terrain. Each map rewards learning its specific quirks, and the 30-bus roster means you will be swapping between different vehicle classes that handle noticeably differently. Articulated buses require real spatial awareness at turns. Smaller city buses feel nimble by comparison. The variety is genuine, not cosmetic. Online co-op is supported, which is a legitimate differentiator for the genre and adds a social dimension that competitors rarely bother with. Where the game struggles is in areas that matter to long-term play. The AI traffic and pedestrian behaviour is serviceable but not convincing under scrutiny. The management depth plateaus relatively quickly, and players expecting a transport empire builder will hit a ceiling sooner than they want. The tutorial covers the basics but assumes a degree of patience that not every player will bring. Mod support exists but is not as robust as what Omsi 2 has built over years of community development. That said, for a packaged, polished experience that requires no manual patching or community trawling to be enjoyable, Bus Simulator 21 Extended Edition is the cleaner entry point into bus sims. As someone who tracks depth-of-decision as a primary metric, I will be honest: this is not a spreadsheet game. The strategy layer is light. But the Extended Edition earns its place as the most complete retail bus simulation available, and the co-op feature alone separates it from most of its competition. Approach it as a relaxed routing game with a management wrapper and it delivers consistently. Approach it expecting Omsi-level depth or Cities Skylines-level planning complexity and you will be disappointed. Know what you are buying. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamBus DrivingFleet ManagementOnline Co-opRoute PlanningRelaxingLicensed VehiclesCompany ManagementFirst-Person Driving

System Requirements

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Game Info

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

Features

Single-playerMulti-playerCo-opOnline Co-opSteam AchievementsFull controller supportSteam Trading CardsSteam Cloud+1 more

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