Compare Farming Simulator 2013 Titanium Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Giants Software. Published by Giants Software. Released on 10/9/2013. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Simulation.

Run a full crop-and-livestock operation across open fields, sell what you grow, and reinvest until your farm dominates the map. Old but still functional.

Farming Simulator 2013 Titanium Edition is an open-ended agricultural sim where you plant, harvest, and sell crops while managing cows, sheep, and the cash flow that ties it all together. The Titanium tag means you get the expanded equipment roster baked in, which matters because more machine variety directly translates to more decision-making around efficiency and cost. This is not a fast game. Seasons tick by in real minutes, loans need servicing, and fields do not fertilize themselves. If that cadence sounds meditative rather than boring, you are the target audience. For newcomers, the learning curve is gentler than it looks. The core loop is narrow enough that a first-time player can be profitable within an hour: buy a field, seed it, fertilize, harvest, sell at the co-op. Animals add a parallel income stream that runs mostly on autopilot once feeders are topped up. The tutorial is thin by modern standards, but the systems are transparent. There is no hidden economy here, just acreage times yield times price equals money. That clarity is actually a strength for players who want to understand every variable they are optimizing. What holds up well a decade on is the mod ecosystem. The Steam Workshop and the broader Giants modding community have kept this title alive with new vehicles, maps, and quality-of-life tweaks that address most of the base game's rough edges. A modded installation can feel meaningfully different from vanilla, and that replayability is the real argument for picking this up over a free demo of something newer. The AI workers you hire to run equipment autonomously are competent enough for straight field runs but will occasionally stall at field boundaries, so budget time for babysitting on irregular plots. The honest downsides: the graphics engine is visibly aged, the physics are loose compared to later entries in the series, and the map variety in the base game is limited to a single European-style environment. Multiplayer is available but peer-to-peer, so session stability depends entirely on whoever is hosting. If you have played Farming Simulator 15 or later, coming back here will feel like a step backward in almost every technical dimension. This edition makes sense if you are price-sensitive, already deep in 2013-era mods, or want a lighter install footprint than the newer titles demand. Bottom line: 93 percent positive across over five thousand reviews is not a fluke. The game does exactly what it promises, does it without fuss, and has a mod library that punches well above its age. Approach it as a slow-burn numbers game where patience is the primary skill, and it will hold your attention longer than its release date suggests. Diego, Scout Team

Farming Simulator 2013 Titanium Edition
CasualSimulation

Farming Simulator 2013 Titanium Edition

Oct 9, 2013Giants Software
GamerScout Says

Run a full crop-and-livestock operation across open fields, sell what you grow, and reinvest until your farm dominates the map. Old but still functional.

PC
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About Farming Simulator 2013 Titanium Edition

Farming Simulator 2013 Titanium Edition is an open-ended agricultural sim where you plant, harvest, and sell crops while managing cows, sheep, and the cash flow that ties it all together. The Titanium tag means you get the expanded equipment roster baked in, which matters because more machine variety directly translates to more decision-making around efficiency and cost. This is not a fast game. Seasons tick by in real minutes, loans need servicing, and fields do not fertilize themselves. If that cadence sounds meditative rather than boring, you are the target audience. For newcomers, the learning curve is gentler than it looks. The core loop is narrow enough that a first-time player can be profitable within an hour: buy a field, seed it, fertilize, harvest, sell at the co-op. Animals add a parallel income stream that runs mostly on autopilot once feeders are topped up. The tutorial is thin by modern standards, but the systems are transparent. There is no hidden economy here, just acreage times yield times price equals money. That clarity is actually a strength for players who want to understand every variable they are optimizing. What holds up well a decade on is the mod ecosystem. The Steam Workshop and the broader Giants modding community have kept this title alive with new vehicles, maps, and quality-of-life tweaks that address most of the base game's rough edges. A modded installation can feel meaningfully different from vanilla, and that replayability is the real argument for picking this up over a free demo of something newer. The AI workers you hire to run equipment autonomously are competent enough for straight field runs but will occasionally stall at field boundaries, so budget time for babysitting on irregular plots. The honest downsides: the graphics engine is visibly aged, the physics are loose compared to later entries in the series, and the map variety in the base game is limited to a single European-style environment. Multiplayer is available but peer-to-peer, so session stability depends entirely on whoever is hosting. If you have played Farming Simulator 15 or later, coming back here will feel like a step backward in almost every technical dimension. This edition makes sense if you are price-sensitive, already deep in 2013-era mods, or want a lighter install footprint than the newer titles demand. Bottom line: 93 percent positive across over five thousand reviews is not a fluke. The game does exactly what it promises, does it without fuss, and has a mod library that punches well above its age. Approach it as a slow-burn numbers game where patience is the primary skill, and it will hold your attention longer than its release date suggests. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamAgriculture SimMod SupportOpen World FarmingWorker AutomationLivestock ManagementSlow-BurnRelaxing

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
93%(5,348)

Game Info

Developer
Giants Software
Publisher
Giants Software
Release Date
Oct 9, 2013

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