Bus Simulator 21 Next Stop – Season Pass
A season pass for Bus Simulator 21 Next Stop, extra buses and content bolted onto an already sprawling licensed fleet sim. Worth it only if you're already hooked.
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About Bus Simulator 21 Next Stop – Season Pass
Bus Simulator 21 Next Stop is a transit management and driving sim from stillalive studios that sits at a curious crossroads between hands-on driving game and light operational management. You pick routes, manage schedules, hire drivers, and yes, physically drive the buses yourself across two distinct maps that range from urban grids to more open suburban stretches. The core loop asks you to balance the satisfaction of a clean city route with the overhead of keeping a small transport company profitable. If that sounds like it has layers, it does, though whether those layers hold up at depth is a more complicated conversation. The headline feature of the base game is its roster of 30 officially licensed buses. That is a real selling point for transit enthusiasts. Manufacturers like Mercedes-Benz, MAN, and Setra are represented, and each bus handles differently enough that swapping between them feels meaningful rather than cosmetic. The Season Pass extends this fleet further, adding additional vehicles and content drops post-launch. For someone who has already put 50-plus hours into the base game and wants fresh iron to drive, the pass delivers exactly what it promises. For someone evaluating entry into the series, the Season Pass is not the right starting point, the base game needs to earn that commitment first. The management side of things is where Bus Simulator 21 loses some players and gains others. It is not Omsi 2 in terms of hardcore simulation fidelity, and it is not a full-fat transport tycoon title either. What it is sits in the middle: accessible enough that you can ignore the deeper scheduling systems and just drive, but deep enough that optimising a profitable network with hired AI drivers across both maps takes real planning. The AI drivers are functional but not brilliant, they will cover routes without constant babysitting, though traffic behavior from all AI on the road can be frustrating. The tutorial is serviceable and explains the management UI without overwhelming newcomers, which matters for a game pulling in players from both the casual driving side and the sim-management side. The mixed Steam review score (around 70 percent positive across a substantial review pool) reflects a game that launched with technical rough edges and has received patches since, but still carries some persistent complaints around performance optimisation and AI pathfinding quirks. The co-op mode, where you and a friend can operate the same network simultaneously, is one of the more underrated features here, splitting driving and management duties between two players genuinely improves the experience and partially papers over the AI driver limitations. If you have a co-op partner lined up, the value calculation shifts noticeably in the game's favor. As a Season Pass specifically, the calculus is straightforward. You are buying additional buses and content for a game you presumably already own. If you bounced off Bus Simulator 21 Next Stop in the first few hours, no amount of extra vehicle licenses will fix that. If you are the kind of player who has a favourite livery and knows which map segment benefits from an articulated low-floor bus versus a standard double-decker, this pass gives you more of what you already like. The mod ecosystem on PC adds further longevity for the committed, with community maps and additional vehicle packs extending the game well beyond the base content. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- stillalive studios
- Publisher
- astragon Entertainment
- Release Date
- Sep 7, 2021