Compare Ticket to Ride - Switzerland (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Marmalade Game Studio Ltd. Published by Asmodee Digital, Days of Wonder. Released on 11/14/2023. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Simulation, Strategy.

Ticket to Ride's Switzerland map shrinks the board and raises the stakes, but Mixed Steam reviews suggest the digital port has some rough edges worth knowing about.

Ticket to Ride Switzerland is a DLC map for Marmalade Game Studio's digital adaptation of the classic board game, and it does something mechanically interesting: it scales the experience down to 2-3 players exclusively, which forces a tighter, more confrontational style of play than the standard USA board. Routes get blocked faster, tunnel cards punish greedy planning, and the mountain passes add a card-cost variance mechanic that rewards hand management over pure route length. If you have ever played the physical Switzerland map and complained that the base digital game felt too passive, this is the version that actually bites back. For strategy-minded players, the reduced player count ceiling is the headline decision point. Fewer players means fewer routes contested simultaneously, but the Swiss geography is dense enough that two careful players will still cut each other off regularly. Destination tickets here tend to be shorter in point value but clustered geographically, which means scoring efficiently requires chaining several tickets through shared track segments. Miscalculate one connection and your entire scoring plan collapses. That kind of cascading consequence is exactly what makes a compact map worth studying. The digital implementation is where things get complicated, and the Mixed 68% Steam rating reflects real friction rather than taste preference. The UI for tunnel card resolution can be unclear to newcomers, and the AI opponents, while described as state-of-the-art by the publisher, play noticeably passively on lower difficulties. On higher settings the AI becomes more competitive, but it still occasionally misses obvious route blocks that a human player would exploit immediately. Online multiplayer is available and works, though finding active lobbies specifically for the Switzerland map requires patience. The base Ticket to Ride game must also be owned, since this is a standalone DLC, which adds a cost consideration the pricing widget next to this review will make clear. Who is this actually for? Experienced Ticket to Ride players who want a tighter, shorter session format will get genuine value here. The Switzerland map runs noticeably faster than the USA board, making it a strong choice when you have 30-45 minutes rather than a full evening. Complete newcomers to the series should probably start with the base game on the USA map before buying in, because the tunnel mechanic and condensed geography can feel punishing without baseline familiarity. If you own the physical Switzerland expansion already, the digital version adds the convenience of async online play and a dedicated AI opponent, but it is not a radical improvement over the cardboard version. The mod ecosystem and additional platform features are limited here since this is a casual board game port rather than a grand-strategy sandbox, so do not expect community scenarios or rule variants beyond what Marmalade ships officially. The tutorial covers the tunnel mechanic adequately but moves quickly, and there is no in-app reference card for card draw probabilities during tunnel resolution, which is the one mechanical wrinkle new players consistently stumble over. A screenshot of a probability table is worth finding before your first session. Bottom line: a solid map choice for dedicated Ticket to Ride fans who want faster, more tactical sessions, held back slightly by AI passivity and a port that does not quite reach the polish its price point implies. Diego, Scout Team

Ticket to Ride - Switzerland (DLC)
CasualSimulationStrategy

Ticket to Ride - Switzerland (DLC)

Nov 14, 2023Marmalade Game Studio LtdAsmodee Digital, Days of Wonder
GamerScout Says

Ticket to Ride's Switzerland map shrinks the board and raises the stakes, but Mixed Steam reviews suggest the digital port has some rough edges worth knowing about.

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About Ticket to Ride - Switzerland (DLC)

Ticket to Ride Switzerland is a DLC map for Marmalade Game Studio's digital adaptation of the classic board game, and it does something mechanically interesting: it scales the experience down to 2-3 players exclusively, which forces a tighter, more confrontational style of play than the standard USA board. Routes get blocked faster, tunnel cards punish greedy planning, and the mountain passes add a card-cost variance mechanic that rewards hand management over pure route length. If you have ever played the physical Switzerland map and complained that the base digital game felt too passive, this is the version that actually bites back. For strategy-minded players, the reduced player count ceiling is the headline decision point. Fewer players means fewer routes contested simultaneously, but the Swiss geography is dense enough that two careful players will still cut each other off regularly. Destination tickets here tend to be shorter in point value but clustered geographically, which means scoring efficiently requires chaining several tickets through shared track segments. Miscalculate one connection and your entire scoring plan collapses. That kind of cascading consequence is exactly what makes a compact map worth studying. The digital implementation is where things get complicated, and the Mixed 68% Steam rating reflects real friction rather than taste preference. The UI for tunnel card resolution can be unclear to newcomers, and the AI opponents, while described as state-of-the-art by the publisher, play noticeably passively on lower difficulties. On higher settings the AI becomes more competitive, but it still occasionally misses obvious route blocks that a human player would exploit immediately. Online multiplayer is available and works, though finding active lobbies specifically for the Switzerland map requires patience. The base Ticket to Ride game must also be owned, since this is a standalone DLC, which adds a cost consideration the pricing widget next to this review will make clear. Who is this actually for? Experienced Ticket to Ride players who want a tighter, shorter session format will get genuine value here. The Switzerland map runs noticeably faster than the USA board, making it a strong choice when you have 30-45 minutes rather than a full evening. Complete newcomers to the series should probably start with the base game on the USA map before buying in, because the tunnel mechanic and condensed geography can feel punishing without baseline familiarity. If you own the physical Switzerland expansion already, the digital version adds the convenience of async online play and a dedicated AI opponent, but it is not a radical improvement over the cardboard version. The mod ecosystem and additional platform features are limited here since this is a casual board game port rather than a grand-strategy sandbox, so do not expect community scenarios or rule variants beyond what Marmalade ships officially. The tutorial covers the tunnel mechanic adequately but moves quickly, and there is no in-app reference card for card draw probabilities during tunnel resolution, which is the one mechanical wrinkle new players consistently stumble over. A screenshot of a probability table is worth finding before your first session. Bottom line: a solid map choice for dedicated Ticket to Ride fans who want faster, more tactical sessions, held back slightly by AI passivity and a port that does not quite reach the polish its price point implies. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamBoard Game Port2-3 PlayerTunnel MechanicShort SessionsRoute BuildingHand ManagementOnline MultiplayerDLC Map

System Requirements

System requirements for Ticket to Ride - Switzerland (DLC) aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Steam
68%(1,064)

Game Info

Developer
Marmalade Game Studio Ltd
Publisher
Asmodee Digital, Days of Wonder
Release Date
Nov 14, 2023

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