Compare Construction Simulator prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by weltenbauer. Software Entwicklung GmbH. Published by astragon Entertainment. Released on 9/20/2022. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Casual, Simulation.

Ninety-plus contracts across two open-world maps, a 70-machine licensed fleet, and four-player co-op make this the most content-dense entry in the series. The question is whether you find compacting asphalt meditative or maddening.

I went into Construction Simulator expecting a lightweight casual sim with about twenty hours of content before the repetition set in. What I found instead was a surprisingly well-structured business-management loop wrapped around some genuinely satisfying heavy-machinery operation. You start with almost nothing, guided by a mentor named Hape, and you work your way up by accepting contracts, managing your cashflow, renting equipment when you cannot afford to buy, and eventually expanding into the more technically demanding jobs the game unlocks at higher levels. That progression curve is accessible enough that a complete newcomer to the genre will not feel lost, but it has enough moving parts to keep a sim veteran engaged past the first map. The two campaigns, one set in the German-inspired town of Friedenberg and one in the American Sunny Haven, give the game a structural spine that many sim titles lack. Each map has its own contracts tied to residential, commercial, and industrial development, and completing those unlocks new clients and more complex multi-stage jobs. The licensed machinery roster is the headline feature here: brands including Caterpillar, Liebherr, CASE, Bobcat, Kenworth, Doosan, Scania, and others are all faithfully modelled, and operating them feels distinct enough that choosing between a wheel excavator and a tracked one actually matters. Post-launch free updates added machines like the Wacker Neuson EW100 wheel excavator, a refueling and repair service vehicle, enhanced terrain reworks, and seasonal contracts, pushing the total contract count past one hundred. That is genuine long-term value from the development team. The co-op implementation is smarter than it first looks. Up to four players can join a host's session at any time, and the division of labour is completely freeform: one person hauls materials by truck while another operates the crane on-site. Guests earn credits that carry back to their own save file, so there is a real incentive to drop into a friend's game even without shared campaign progress. The difficulty slider on individual contracts also means that a four-person crew cannot just steamroll every job. The one structural caveat is that campaign rewards and project progress only save to the host, which is a friction point worth knowing before you commit hours as a guest. Not everything lands cleanly. The camera system is the biggest recurring complaint in reviews and community discussions: machinery that requires both analog inputs simultaneously can make precise crane or bucket work disorienting, and resetting your view mid-task breaks the flow. Road driving in large vehicles feels loose, and the traffic AI is unreliable enough that hauling equipment across town becomes more stressful than the actual construction work. Some players also note that without a sandbox mode the contract structure eventually feels linear. These are real weaknesses, not cosmetic ones. Visually the game is solid rather than spectacular, the open worlds look lived-in but will not stress modern hardware, and the audio leans into mechanical sounds rather than atmosphere. Who is this for? Anyone who finds a zen loop in repetitive, process-driven tasks will get dozens of hours of genuine satisfaction here. If you burned time in Farming Simulator or PowerWash Simulator and found yourself wishing the scope were larger and the machines louder, this is the logical next step. The tutorial respects your time, the licensed fleet gives enthusiasts something to get excited about, and the crossplay co-op works. Hardcore sim players looking for deep physics modelling or full sandbox freedom will bump against the ceiling fairly quickly. For everyone else, the 81 percent positive Steam rating across over fourteen thousand reviews reflects a game that delivers on its core promise steadily and without pretension. Diego, Scout Team

Construction Simulator

Construction Simulator

Sep 20, 2022weltenbauer. Software Entwicklung GmbHastragon Entertainment
GamerScout Says

Ninety-plus contracts across two open-world maps, a 70-machine licensed fleet, and four-player co-op make this the most content-dense entry in the series. The question is whether you find compacting asphalt meditative or maddening.

PCXbox
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A

GamerScout Verdict

Best for sim fans who want a structured contract loop, licensed heavy machinery, and a friend to split the crane work with.

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Screenshots & Media

About Construction Simulator

I went into Construction Simulator expecting a lightweight casual sim with about twenty hours of content before the repetition set in. What I found instead was a surprisingly well-structured business-management loop wrapped around some genuinely satisfying heavy-machinery operation. You start with almost nothing, guided by a mentor named Hape, and you work your way up by accepting contracts, managing your cashflow, renting equipment when you cannot afford to buy, and eventually expanding into the more technically demanding jobs the game unlocks at higher levels. That progression curve is accessible enough that a complete newcomer to the genre will not feel lost, but it has enough moving parts to keep a sim veteran engaged past the first map. The two campaigns, one set in the German-inspired town of Friedenberg and one in the American Sunny Haven, give the game a structural spine that many sim titles lack. Each map has its own contracts tied to residential, commercial, and industrial development, and completing those unlocks new clients and more complex multi-stage jobs. The licensed machinery roster is the headline feature here: brands including Caterpillar, Liebherr, CASE, Bobcat, Kenworth, Doosan, Scania, and others are all faithfully modelled, and operating them feels distinct enough that choosing between a wheel excavator and a tracked one actually matters. Post-launch free updates added machines like the Wacker Neuson EW100 wheel excavator, a refueling and repair service vehicle, enhanced terrain reworks, and seasonal contracts, pushing the total contract count past one hundred. That is genuine long-term value from the development team. The co-op implementation is smarter than it first looks. Up to four players can join a host's session at any time, and the division of labour is completely freeform: one person hauls materials by truck while another operates the crane on-site. Guests earn credits that carry back to their own save file, so there is a real incentive to drop into a friend's game even without shared campaign progress. The difficulty slider on individual contracts also means that a four-person crew cannot just steamroll every job. The one structural caveat is that campaign rewards and project progress only save to the host, which is a friction point worth knowing before you commit hours as a guest. Not everything lands cleanly. The camera system is the biggest recurring complaint in reviews and community discussions: machinery that requires both analog inputs simultaneously can make precise crane or bucket work disorienting, and resetting your view mid-task breaks the flow. Road driving in large vehicles feels loose, and the traffic AI is unreliable enough that hauling equipment across town becomes more stressful than the actual construction work. Some players also note that without a sandbox mode the contract structure eventually feels linear. These are real weaknesses, not cosmetic ones. Visually the game is solid rather than spectacular, the open worlds look lived-in but will not stress modern hardware, and the audio leans into mechanical sounds rather than atmosphere. Who is this for? Anyone who finds a zen loop in repetitive, process-driven tasks will get dozens of hours of genuine satisfaction here. If you burned time in Farming Simulator or PowerWash Simulator and found yourself wishing the scope were larger and the machines louder, this is the logical next step. The tutorial respects your time, the licensed fleet gives enthusiasts something to get excited about, and the crossplay co-op works. Hardcore sim players looking for deep physics modelling or full sandbox freedom will bump against the ceiling fairly quickly. For everyone else, the 81 percent positive Steam rating across over fourteen thousand reviews reflects a game that delivers on its core promise steadily and without pretension.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Tags

auto-admittedBusiness ManagementLicensed Vehicles4-Player Co-opContract SystemOpen World SimCrossplayZen LoopProgression Unlock

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10
Processor
Intel Core i5-4460 3.2 GHz or AMD FX-8350 Eight-Core or comparable
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
Nvidia GTX 960 (4GB) or AMD Radeon Pr…

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Processor
Intel i5-10400F or AMD Ryzen 5 2600 or comparable
Memory
16 GB RAM
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660 (6GB) or AMD Radeon RX570…

Keep exploring

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Construction Simulator.

Reviews & Ratings

Steam
81%(14,104)

Game Info

Developer
weltenbauer. Software Entwicklung GmbH
Publisher
astragon Entertainment
Release Date
Sep 20, 2022

Features

Single-playerMultiplayerCo-opOnline Co OpSteam AchievementsFull controller supportCamera ComfortCustom Volume Controls+6 more

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

No card? Pay another way

Top up your Steam Wallet or buy crypto with any card — instant delivery, no bank account needed.

More from weltenbauer. Software Entwicklung GmbH

Buy smarter: helpful guides

Construction Simulator live on Twitch

Looking for more? See games like Construction Simulator →

Frequently asked questions about Construction Simulator

How much does Construction Simulator cost?

Construction Simulator pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

Where can I buy Construction Simulator cheapest?

Compare Construction Simulator prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Construction Simulator available on?

Construction Simulator is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Construction Simulator released?

Construction Simulator was released on 20 September 2022.

Who developed Construction Simulator?

Construction Simulator was developed by weltenbauer. Software Entwicklung GmbH and published by astragon Entertainment.