Compare Electrician Simulator prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Take IT Studio!. Published by Ultimate Games S.A.. Released on 9/21/2022. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie, Simulation.

A hands-on electrician sim where you wire sockets, fix appliances, and lay cable, satisfying if fiddly, surprisingly deep for a casual trade game.

Electrician Simulator drops you into the overalls of a self-employed electrician working residential and small commercial jobs. You install sockets, replace fuse components, repair broken appliances, trace faulty wiring, and swap out light fixtures. None of that sounds thrilling on paper, but the job-by-job progression loop has a quiet momentum to it. Each call-out gives you a checklist of tasks, and the game rewards methodical thinking over button-mashing. In that sense it scratches the same itch as PowerWash Simulator or Car Mechanic Simulator: the pleasure is in doing a job properly and seeing the result. From a mechanical standpoint, the sim leans on a handful of core interactions. You use a multimeter to diagnose live circuits, follow color-coded wiring guides to connect terminals correctly, and physically handle components like junction boxes, cable conduit, and breaker panels. Get the sequence wrong and you can fail the job or trigger a fault. The game does not punish you with permadeath or anything severe, but sloppy work does affect your professional rating and income. That thin feedback loop is enough to keep you honest without turning the experience into a stressful grind. The tutorial is patient and clear, which matters more than people admit for a niche sim like this. Take IT Studio walks you through the basics before throwing you into unsupervised jobs, and the in-game reference materials let you double-check wiring diagrams without quitting to a browser tab. Newcomers to the genre should feel welcome. Veterans of deeper sims will find the decision space narrower than they might want, since there is no business management layer, no staff to hire, and no branching upgrade tree of any real complexity. It is a job simulator, not a business strategy game, and the scope is deliberately modest. Where it stumbles is in variety and longevity. The job types do repeat, the environments feel samey after a few hours, and the AI clients are just quest-givers with no personality. At roughly four thousand reviews and a steady 80 percent positive rating on Steam, the community seems to accept these limitations as part of the package. Players looking for a relaxing, low-stakes way to learn how real electrical work is structured will find genuine value here. Players expecting the systemic depth of a Paradox sim or the content breadth of a city builder will bounce off it quickly. It is a focused, competent trade sim that knows exactly what it is. Diego, Scout Team

Electrician Simulator
AdventureCasualIndieSimulation

Electrician Simulator

Sep 21, 2022Take IT Studio!Ultimate Games S.A.
GamerScout Says

A hands-on electrician sim where you wire sockets, fix appliances, and lay cable, satisfying if fiddly, surprisingly deep for a casual trade game.

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About Electrician Simulator

Electrician Simulator drops you into the overalls of a self-employed electrician working residential and small commercial jobs. You install sockets, replace fuse components, repair broken appliances, trace faulty wiring, and swap out light fixtures. None of that sounds thrilling on paper, but the job-by-job progression loop has a quiet momentum to it. Each call-out gives you a checklist of tasks, and the game rewards methodical thinking over button-mashing. In that sense it scratches the same itch as PowerWash Simulator or Car Mechanic Simulator: the pleasure is in doing a job properly and seeing the result. From a mechanical standpoint, the sim leans on a handful of core interactions. You use a multimeter to diagnose live circuits, follow color-coded wiring guides to connect terminals correctly, and physically handle components like junction boxes, cable conduit, and breaker panels. Get the sequence wrong and you can fail the job or trigger a fault. The game does not punish you with permadeath or anything severe, but sloppy work does affect your professional rating and income. That thin feedback loop is enough to keep you honest without turning the experience into a stressful grind. The tutorial is patient and clear, which matters more than people admit for a niche sim like this. Take IT Studio walks you through the basics before throwing you into unsupervised jobs, and the in-game reference materials let you double-check wiring diagrams without quitting to a browser tab. Newcomers to the genre should feel welcome. Veterans of deeper sims will find the decision space narrower than they might want, since there is no business management layer, no staff to hire, and no branching upgrade tree of any real complexity. It is a job simulator, not a business strategy game, and the scope is deliberately modest. Where it stumbles is in variety and longevity. The job types do repeat, the environments feel samey after a few hours, and the AI clients are just quest-givers with no personality. At roughly four thousand reviews and a steady 80 percent positive rating on Steam, the community seems to accept these limitations as part of the package. Players looking for a relaxing, low-stakes way to learn how real electrical work is structured will find genuine value here. Players expecting the systemic depth of a Paradox sim or the content breadth of a city builder will bounce off it quickly. It is a focused, competent trade sim that knows exactly what it is. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamTrade SimJob SimulatorRelaxingFirst-PersonPuzzle-LightRealistic MechanicsSingle-Player Only

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
80%(4,175)

Game Info

Developer
Take IT Studio!
Publisher
Ultimate Games S.A.
Release Date
Sep 21, 2022

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