Bus Simulator 21 Next Stop - Gold Upgrade (DLC)
The Gold Upgrade bundles every post-launch content drop for Bus Simulator 21 into one package - extra routes, buses, and management tools for the dedicated transit fan.
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About Bus Simulator 21 Next Stop - Gold Upgrade (DLC)
Bus Simulator 21 Next Stop is exactly what it says on the tin: you drive buses, manage routes, hire drivers, and slowly build a functioning transit company across two large open-world maps. The Gold Upgrade DLC is the all-in-one content bundle that stacks on top of the base game, adding officially licensed buses, additional map content, and expanded management layers to an already content-heavy package. If you were already enjoying the base game and wanted more reasons to sit behind a wheel for four hours on a Sunday afternoon, this is where you go next. The core appeal here is the sheer variety of officially licensed vehicles. Stillalive studios leaned hard into the licensing side of things, and driving different bus models genuinely feels distinct enough to matter - wheelbase, turning radius, and door configurations all behave differently. The two base maps offer urban and more rural driving flavors, and the Gold content expands what you can do across both. The management side is light enough that it never becomes a spreadsheet nightmare, but deep enough that building out your company has a satisfying loop to it. Hire drivers, assign routes, watch your little fleet run itself while you take manual control of whichever bus you feel like hopping into. Multiplayer co-op is present and actually works reasonably well for what it is. You and a friend can run routes on the same map simultaneously, which sounds mundane but lands surprisingly well as a low-stress hangout game. It is not couch split-screen - this is online co-op only - so the "four friends on the sofa" scenario does not apply here. Controller support is listed as full, and while a steering wheel setup will feel most natural, a gamepad works fine for casual play. The driving physics are forgiving rather than sim-brutal, which keeps things accessible without feeling like a toy. Where Bus Simulator 21 stumbles is in its rough edges. The Mixed Steam rating (hovering around 70 percent positive across thousands of reviews) reflects a launch period that had performance issues and some AI passenger behavior that ranged from charming to baffling. Patches have improved things, but it is worth knowing this is not a polished gem - it is a workmanlike sim that prioritizes content volume and variety over technical flair. If you are expecting the tactile satisfaction of something like Euro Truck Simulator 2, you will find Bus Simulator 21 a step below that benchmark in feel and atmosphere. If you are a transit enthusiast or just want something chill to zone out to, it lands better. The Gold Upgrade specifically makes most sense if you already know you like the base game and want the full content library in one shot rather than picking through individual DLC packs. For newcomers, grab the base game first and see if the loop clicks. For existing fans who have been riding the base content for a while, the Gold bundle is the natural next stop. Riley, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- stillalive studios
- Publisher
- astragon Entertainment
- Release Date
- Sep 7, 2021