Compare City Bus Manager prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by PeDePe GbR. Published by Aerosoft GmbH. Released on 6/25/2024. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Casual, Simulation.

Run a bus company from a single depot to a city-spanning network, using real-world map data of your actual hometown or any major city.

City Bus Manager puts you in charge of a public transit operation starting from nothing: one depot, a thin budget, and the task of connecting a city that does not care whether your schedules are realistic. The core loop is tighter than most tycoon games in this space. You draw routes on real map data powered by OpenStreetMap, buy buses from a catalogue with varying capacity and running costs, hire and schedule drivers, then watch the numbers roll in or, more likely, watch them bleed out while you figure out why the 09:15 to the train station is always half-empty. That feedback loop of route design, frequency tuning, and financial adjustment is genuinely engaging and can eat a quiet evening without warning. From a systems perspective, the game sits somewhere between a light management sim and a proper tycoon. It is not Transport Fever depth - there is no full infrastructure build-out, no rail or tram network to bolt on - but that narrower scope is also what keeps it approachable. The fleet maintenance system requires you to schedule servicing so buses do not degrade into liabilities, and staff management adds a mild HR layer where driver satisfaction affects reliability. Neither system is punishing, but both reward attention. The real map data is the standout hook: planning a network for your actual city, then testing whether your mental model of local travel demand was correct, is a loop that most people in the genre have never offered. The Steam Workshop integration is worth calling out specifically because it significantly extends replay value. Community-submitted cities and scenarios fill gaps where the base game's city selection might miss your hometown, and modders have already expanded bus model rosters. With 91 percent positive reviews across nearly three thousand Steam ratings, the reception is not a fluke - the developer has been responsive to post-launch feedback, which matters for a live sim title. The tutorial does a reasonable job of walking newcomers through route creation and financial basics without drowning them in menus, so if you have never touched a transit tycoon before, the learning curve is gradual rather than vertical. Where City Bus Manager falls short is in late-game complexity. Once your network is profitable and your depot is fully upgraded, the decision space narrows. There is no meaningful competitor AI to react to, no city growth simulation pushing demand into new districts, and the challenge of staying solvent fades once you have found a handful of efficient route configurations. Players who want a systemic sandbox that generates emergent crises will hit a ceiling. The graphics are functional rather than impressive, and bus animations are not going to pull anyone away from a more cinematic sim. Think of this as a spreadsheet-friendly management game wearing a light 3D skin, and your expectations will align with what is actually delivered. For strategy and sim players who enjoy optimisation puzzles with a real-world geography angle, City Bus Manager delivers a satisfying middle ground between casual city builders and hardcore transport managers. It is a strong entry point for newcomers to the genre, and the Workshop ecosystem gives veteran players a reason to keep generating new challenges. Just do not expect the late-game complexity to match the early curiosity of planning your first network. Diego, Scout Team

City Bus Manager

City Bus Manager

Jun 25, 2024PeDePe GbRAerosoft GmbH
GamerScout Says

Run a bus company from a single depot to a city-spanning network, using real-world map data of your actual hometown or any major city.

PCXbox
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Platinum
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €13.89

GamerScout Verdict

A well-tuned transit tycoon that shines in the early and mid-game, best for players who want real-map route planning without hardcore complexity.

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About City Bus Manager

City Bus Manager puts you in charge of a public transit operation starting from nothing: one depot, a thin budget, and the task of connecting a city that does not care whether your schedules are realistic. The core loop is tighter than most tycoon games in this space. You draw routes on real map data powered by OpenStreetMap, buy buses from a catalogue with varying capacity and running costs, hire and schedule drivers, then watch the numbers roll in or, more likely, watch them bleed out while you figure out why the 09:15 to the train station is always half-empty. That feedback loop of route design, frequency tuning, and financial adjustment is genuinely engaging and can eat a quiet evening without warning. From a systems perspective, the game sits somewhere between a light management sim and a proper tycoon. It is not Transport Fever depth - there is no full infrastructure build-out, no rail or tram network to bolt on - but that narrower scope is also what keeps it approachable. The fleet maintenance system requires you to schedule servicing so buses do not degrade into liabilities, and staff management adds a mild HR layer where driver satisfaction affects reliability. Neither system is punishing, but both reward attention. The real map data is the standout hook: planning a network for your actual city, then testing whether your mental model of local travel demand was correct, is a loop that most people in the genre have never offered. The Steam Workshop integration is worth calling out specifically because it significantly extends replay value. Community-submitted cities and scenarios fill gaps where the base game's city selection might miss your hometown, and modders have already expanded bus model rosters. With 91 percent positive reviews across nearly three thousand Steam ratings, the reception is not a fluke - the developer has been responsive to post-launch feedback, which matters for a live sim title. The tutorial does a reasonable job of walking newcomers through route creation and financial basics without drowning them in menus, so if you have never touched a transit tycoon before, the learning curve is gradual rather than vertical. Where City Bus Manager falls short is in late-game complexity. Once your network is profitable and your depot is fully upgraded, the decision space narrows. There is no meaningful competitor AI to react to, no city growth simulation pushing demand into new districts, and the challenge of staying solvent fades once you have found a handful of efficient route configurations. Players who want a systemic sandbox that generates emergent crises will hit a ceiling. The graphics are functional rather than impressive, and bus animations are not going to pull anyone away from a more cinematic sim. Think of this as a spreadsheet-friendly management game wearing a light 3D skin, and your expectations will align with what is actually delivered. For strategy and sim players who enjoy optimisation puzzles with a real-world geography angle, City Bus Manager delivers a satisfying middle ground between casual city builders and hardcore transport managers. It is a strong entry point for newcomers to the genre, and the Workshop ecosystem gives veteran players a reason to keep generating new challenges. Just do not expect the late-game complexity to match the early curiosity of planning your first network.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Tags

steamTransit TycoonReal Map DataRoute PlanningFleet ManagementStaff ManagementWorkshop SupportBeginner-FriendlyFinancial Management

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Win 7 / 8.1 / 10 / 11 (64Bit)
Processor
Prozessor Quad Core CPU with min 2.6 GHZ
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
Geforce 760 or similar
Storage
15 GB available space Sou…

Recommended

OS
Win 10 / 11 (64Bit)
Processor
AMD / Intel quad-core processor running at 3.5 GHz (AMD Athlon X4 950 series or Intel Core i5 3000 series or newer archi…

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
91%(2,756)

Game Info

Developer
PeDePe GbR
Publisher
Aerosoft GmbH
Release Date
Jun 25, 2024

Features

Single-playerSteam AchievementsSteam Trading CardsSteam WorkshopSteam CloudFamily Sharing

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How much does City Bus Manager cost?

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What platforms is City Bus Manager available on?

City Bus Manager is available on PC, Xbox.

When was City Bus Manager released?

City Bus Manager was released on 25 June 2024.

Who developed City Bus Manager?

City Bus Manager was developed by PeDePe GbR and published by Aerosoft GmbH.