Compare The Slaverian Trucker prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by SawyerK Games. Published by SawyerK Games. Released on 2/17/2026. Available on PC. Genres: Indie, Racing, Simulation.

Solo-dev survival trucking in a janky post-Soviet wasteland that somehow holds 85% positive Steam reviews and will eat your evening if you let it.

I went in expecting a budget curiosity and came out thirty-odd in-game days later with a spreadsheet of trade routes, a beat-up semi loaded with contraband oil, and genuine respect for what one developer built here. The Slaverian Trucker sits at the intersection of survival sim, open-world hauler, and life simulator, and the fact that it mostly works is the first thing worth saying. The resource management loop is where the game earns its keep. You are watching engine oil, radiator coolant, fuel levels, and cargo weight simultaneously, while your own hunger and thirst meters tick upward on a scale of 0 to 100. Ignore any of these long enough and the consequences compound fast. Legal delivery contracts between towns provide the baseline income, but the payout math is tight enough early on that smuggling runs start looking attractive. The police proximity system, where illegal cargo gets seized within roughly 50 metres of a checkpoint, creates genuine tension rather than a sophisticated wanted system, which is a fair criticism, but it does force route planning and timing decisions that keep the mid-game from going stale. Beyond hauling, the sandbox extends to drag racing, rally racing, dog racing, arm wrestling, hunting, scavenging abandoned vehicles, and NPC quest chains, which is an absurd list for a single-developer project. The vehicle side of things is the other core pillar. You repair, tune, and customize trucks and cars, and the progression from scraping together cash for basic parts to running a small fleet across the Slaverian countryside carries a satisfying arc. No Steam Workshop mod support exists at time of writing, which is a limitation that will matter to anyone hoping to expand content the way the My Summer Car community does, but the base vehicle variety and customization depth hold up reasonably well without it. The world itself uses a paper map with no GPS waypoints, which sounds punishing but actually produces one of the game's best qualities: genuine map literacy that develops over hours of play. The rough edges are real. Controls for personal inventory and weapon equipping feel unintuitive. Load times when reverting saves have been reported as long, though patch notes show the developer actively compressing them. Character models are basic, and some assets are visibly reused across storefronts. An earthquake-style camera shake bug surfaced in at least one recent update patch cycle. The honest framing here is that this is a one-person Early Access project that graduated to a full 1.0 release, and its bug tolerance requirement is higher than a polished studio release. Players who treat the jank as friction rather than failure tend to rack up triple-digit hours. For strategy and sim players, the appeal is the layered decision loop: do you run the safe route to protect cargo, risk the shortcut through checkpoint territory for a better margin, or spend the session repairing the truck that will unlock a more profitable cargo class? It is not a deep economy simulation, but the fixed-price trade routes have enough variable risk attached to them that each session involves real choices. Anyone who has bounced off Euro Truck Simulator for being too serene or My Summer Car for being too punishing and obtuse may find Slaveria sits in a productive middle ground. Diego, Scout Team

The Slaverian Trucker
IndieRacingSimulation

The Slaverian Trucker

Feb 17, 2026SawyerK Games
GamerScout Says

Solo-dev survival trucking in a janky post-Soviet wasteland that somehow holds 85% positive Steam reviews and will eat your evening if you let it.

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About The Slaverian Trucker

I went in expecting a budget curiosity and came out thirty-odd in-game days later with a spreadsheet of trade routes, a beat-up semi loaded with contraband oil, and genuine respect for what one developer built here. The Slaverian Trucker sits at the intersection of survival sim, open-world hauler, and life simulator, and the fact that it mostly works is the first thing worth saying. The resource management loop is where the game earns its keep. You are watching engine oil, radiator coolant, fuel levels, and cargo weight simultaneously, while your own hunger and thirst meters tick upward on a scale of 0 to 100. Ignore any of these long enough and the consequences compound fast. Legal delivery contracts between towns provide the baseline income, but the payout math is tight enough early on that smuggling runs start looking attractive. The police proximity system, where illegal cargo gets seized within roughly 50 metres of a checkpoint, creates genuine tension rather than a sophisticated wanted system, which is a fair criticism, but it does force route planning and timing decisions that keep the mid-game from going stale. Beyond hauling, the sandbox extends to drag racing, rally racing, dog racing, arm wrestling, hunting, scavenging abandoned vehicles, and NPC quest chains, which is an absurd list for a single-developer project. The vehicle side of things is the other core pillar. You repair, tune, and customize trucks and cars, and the progression from scraping together cash for basic parts to running a small fleet across the Slaverian countryside carries a satisfying arc. No Steam Workshop mod support exists at time of writing, which is a limitation that will matter to anyone hoping to expand content the way the My Summer Car community does, but the base vehicle variety and customization depth hold up reasonably well without it. The world itself uses a paper map with no GPS waypoints, which sounds punishing but actually produces one of the game's best qualities: genuine map literacy that develops over hours of play. The rough edges are real. Controls for personal inventory and weapon equipping feel unintuitive. Load times when reverting saves have been reported as long, though patch notes show the developer actively compressing them. Character models are basic, and some assets are visibly reused across storefronts. An earthquake-style camera shake bug surfaced in at least one recent update patch cycle. The honest framing here is that this is a one-person Early Access project that graduated to a full 1.0 release, and its bug tolerance requirement is higher than a polished studio release. Players who treat the jank as friction rather than failure tend to rack up triple-digit hours. For strategy and sim players, the appeal is the layered decision loop: do you run the safe route to protect cargo, risk the shortcut through checkpoint territory for a better margin, or spend the session repairing the truck that will unlock a more profitable cargo class? It is not a deep economy simulation, but the fixed-price trade routes have enough variable risk attached to them that each session involves real choices. Anyone who has bounced off Euro Truck Simulator for being too serene or My Summer Car for being too punishing and obtuse may find Slaveria sits in a productive middle ground. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertier:sub-5Solo DeveloperSurvival EconomyVehicle Repair LoopPaper Map NavigationContraband RiskTrade Route OptimizationNo Workshop ModsLife Sim ElementsCheckpoint Stealth

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Gold

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 6 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
64bit version of Windows 10 or 11
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
1800 MB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050 TI or AMD equivalent
Processor
+3 GHZ 4 core processor
Sound Card
DirectX Compatible Soundcard

Recommended

OS
64bit version of Windows 10 or 11
Memory
12 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 10
Storage
1800 MB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 or AMD equivalent
Processor
+2.9 GHZ 8 core processor
Sound Card
DirectX Compatible Soundcard

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Game Info

Developer
SawyerK Games
Publisher
SawyerK Games
Release Date
Feb 17, 2026

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What platforms is The Slaverian Trucker available on?

The Slaverian Trucker is available on PC.

When was The Slaverian Trucker released?

The Slaverian Trucker was released on 17 February 2026.

Who developed The Slaverian Trucker?

The Slaverian Trucker was developed by SawyerK Games.