Railroad Lines
If your bar for a train sim is throttle, brake, and a cab view, Railroad Lines will technically satisfy it. Everyone else should look elsewhere.
GamerScout Verdict
Worth considering only for casual train fans or younger players who want zero-friction driving; dedicated sim players will find it underpowered in every department.
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About Railroad Lines
My first impression of Railroad Lines was that it feels like something pulled off a bargain shelf circa 2004, shrink-wrapped and forgotten. That is not entirely unfair. This is a low-budget PC train simulation set in what its developers call the 5th Railroad Era, covering 1990 to the present day, and it wears its budget constraints openly. The audiovisual presentation falls well short of what modern railway simulations deliver, with locomotive models and route environments that look visibly dated even by the standards of its 2015 release date. Community reactions on Steam have been blunt about this, with players describing visuals in the neighbourhood of a PlayStation 2 title. The actual gameplay loop is narrower than most sim fans will expect. You take on missions involving either passenger or freight transport, and before each run you assemble a consist from the game's roster of around 20 modern locomotive types and an equal number of wagon varieties. Points are handed out at the start of each stage and can be spent on expanding your train setup; hit the target score and you move on to a new location. That structure is simple by design, explicitly targeting casual players rather than serious sim enthusiasts. Train control strips things down to throttle and brake inputs only. Weather changes on the route have no meaningful effect on how the machine handles. Three camera angles are available, including a driver's cab view, which is the one feature that delivers something resembling atmosphere. For context, 2015 was already a crowded year for anyone who wanted to drive virtual trains on a PC. The genre had demanding, detail-rich competitors at multiple price points, and Railroad Lines does not compete with them on fidelity, physics, or content depth. There is no dynamic simulation under the hood, no scheduling system to manage, and no sandbox to build in. What you get is a short-form mission structure with a straightforward point economy, which is fine if you are a younger player or someone who just wants to watch the scenery pass and occasionally touch the brake. The honest use case here is a child who is genuinely fascinated by trains and needs something easy to pick up without a learning curve, or an adult who is genuinely curious about the era and setting and has very modest graphical expectations. Anyone who has spent time with a proper train sim, or even a mid-tier transport management game, will find Railroad Lines undersized in every direction. There is no multiplayer, no mod support flagged, no post-launch content on record, and the system requirements are old enough to run on hardware from two console generations ago. That last point is not a criticism on its own, but it underlines how little the game asks of itself. If the price is negligible and the person buying it simply wants to feel like a train driver for an afternoon with zero onboarding friction, it serves that narrow purpose. Approach with calibrated expectations.

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Game Info
- Developer
- !Lim studio
- Publisher
- Unknown
- Release Date
- Dec 5, 2015