Train Simulator - Munich - Rosenheim Route Add-On (DLC)
A 70-plus-km Munich-Rosenheim route DLC for Train Simulator, built for players who want realistic cab-ride immersion through Bavarian scenery.
Compare Prices(0 stores)
Loading prices...
We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.
Screenshots & Media

About Train Simulator - Munich - Rosenheim Route Add-On (DLC)
Let's be direct about what this add-on is: a route expansion for Train Simulator that drops you into a recreated Munich-to-Rosenheim corridor stretching over 70 km of track. You get tunnels, single-track sections, and shifting scenery that changes character as you move from urban Munich outward into more rural Bavarian terrain. If you have ever wanted to sit in a cab and actually think about braking curves, speed restrictions, and signal compliance rather than just watching a pretty landscape scroll by, this is the type of content that scratches that itch. The developer, a smaller studio called Dovetail partner 汐留姉妹, has positioned this as a work in progress. The Early Access label here is not decorative. At launch the route covers its core mileage, but the roadmap explicitly notes that additional rolling stock and multiple track types are coming. That matters for your purchase calculus. What you are buying today is a foundation, not a finished product. The single-track sections already included add genuine operational complexity, because meeting and passing logic on single-track railways is one of those things that separates a route with real decision texture from a simple point-to-point drive. For the strategy-minded sim player, the interesting layer here is schedule and timing discipline. Driving a route correctly means internalizing the speed profile across 70 km, hitting station stops within tolerance, and managing energy use on longer hauls. It is not grand-strategy complexity, but it rewards players who treat each run as a systems problem rather than a scenic joyride. If you approach it that way, the depth-per-kilometer ratio is reasonable for a route of this length. The honest caveats are significant. Three Steam reviews at the time of writing is a nearly nonexistent feedback base, which means community knowledge, bug reports, and third-party guides are essentially absent. The tutorial situation is unclear from available data, so newcomers to Train Simulator's control model may find the learning curve steeper than it needs to be. Mod ecosystem support is also unproven at this early stage. And because this is Early Access from a smaller developer, the timeline for promised content additions carries the usual uncertainty that label implies. Who is this for, practically speaking? Existing Train Simulator players who specifically want European prototype content and are comfortable with the base game's controls will get the most value here. If you have already spent time on other Dovetail route add-ons and know what you are signing up for, the Munich-Rosenheim corridor gives you a respectable stretch of Bavarian infrastructure to work through. Newcomers should probably establish their footing with the base game before adding route DLC, particularly DLC that is still in active development. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Reviews & Ratings
Game Info
- Developer
- 汐留姉妹
- Publisher
- Dovetail Games
- Release Date
- Jan 31, 2023