Compare Train Station Renovation prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Live Motion Games. Published by PlayWay S.A.. Released on 10/1/2020. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Casual, Indie, Simulation. Metacritic score: 68/100.

Satisfying low-stakes cleanup sim where you restore crumbling train stations room by room. Think PowerWash Simulator but with more variety and a railway aesthetic.

Train Station Renovation is a first-person cleanup-and-restore simulation developed by Live Motion Games, a studio with a clear specialty in the "mess-to-clean" genre that PlayWay has quietly turned into its own cottage industry. You step into the boots of a renovation contractor tasked with bringing derelict railway stations back to life. That means scrubbing grime, pulling up broken tiles, patching walls, replacing fixtures, and eventually painting surfaces until the place looks like it belongs in a regional heritage calendar. The loop is simple and deliberate, which is exactly its appeal. From a systems perspective, the game is lighter than almost anything else in my usual rotation. There is no resource curve to optimize, no tech tree to plan around, and no AI opponent trying to out-renovate you. What you do get is a task-list structure per level that funnels you through a station methodically: demolish the damaged, clean the dirty, install the new. Each station has distinct rooms and functional areas - platforms, waiting halls, ticket booths, restrooms - and the variety holds up across the level set better than you might expect from a one-mechanic premise. The progression feels measured rather than rushed, which suits the meditative tone the developers are clearly chasing. For a strategy player used to demanding systems, the honest pitch is this: Train Station Renovation is a palate cleanser, not a main course. The decision-making depth is minimal. You are choosing which room to tackle next, occasionally managing which tool to use for a given surface type, and that is roughly the ceiling. The 82% positive Steam rating from over two thousand reviews confirms the formula connects with a real audience, but that audience is specifically looking for low-pressure tactile satisfaction rather than optimization puzzles. The Metacritic score of 68 reflects that critics tend to penalize shallow mechanics even when the execution is clean, and that is a fair tension to acknowledge. If you open this expecting the systemic depth of a proper sim, you will bounce off it quickly. Where the game does earn genuine credit is in how it handles accessibility. There is no punishing tutorial, no failure state that resets your progress, and no timer pressuring you to rush. You can leave a half-renovated platform, go grab a coffee, come back, and pick up exactly where you left off. For someone wanting a no-commitment session between heavier games, that structure is quietly well-designed. The visual feedback when a space transforms from dilapidated wreck to clean station is genuinely pleasing, and the railway setting gives the game a niche identity that separates it from the broader cleaning-sim crowd. Fans of historic infrastructure or anyone with a soft spot for rail heritage will get an extra layer of charm from the theming that a purely mechanical assessment would miss. The weaknesses are real: the AI in the limited NPC elements is essentially non-existent, mod support is not a feature here, and the late-game content does not introduce meaningful new mechanics - just larger stations with more of the same tasks. If you finish three stations and feel the loop getting repetitive, adding five more will not change that feeling. The game is exactly as wide and shallow as it looks on the store page, and that honesty is refreshing compared to titles that oversell their depth. Approach it correctly - short sessions, no spreadsheet required - and it delivers what it promises. Diego, Scout Team

Train Station Renovation
CasualIndieSimulation

Train Station Renovation

Oct 1, 2020Live Motion GamesPlayWay S.A.
GamerScout Says

Satisfying low-stakes cleanup sim where you restore crumbling train stations room by room. Think PowerWash Simulator but with more variety and a railway aesthetic.

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About Train Station Renovation

Train Station Renovation is a first-person cleanup-and-restore simulation developed by Live Motion Games, a studio with a clear specialty in the "mess-to-clean" genre that PlayWay has quietly turned into its own cottage industry. You step into the boots of a renovation contractor tasked with bringing derelict railway stations back to life. That means scrubbing grime, pulling up broken tiles, patching walls, replacing fixtures, and eventually painting surfaces until the place looks like it belongs in a regional heritage calendar. The loop is simple and deliberate, which is exactly its appeal. From a systems perspective, the game is lighter than almost anything else in my usual rotation. There is no resource curve to optimize, no tech tree to plan around, and no AI opponent trying to out-renovate you. What you do get is a task-list structure per level that funnels you through a station methodically: demolish the damaged, clean the dirty, install the new. Each station has distinct rooms and functional areas - platforms, waiting halls, ticket booths, restrooms - and the variety holds up across the level set better than you might expect from a one-mechanic premise. The progression feels measured rather than rushed, which suits the meditative tone the developers are clearly chasing. For a strategy player used to demanding systems, the honest pitch is this: Train Station Renovation is a palate cleanser, not a main course. The decision-making depth is minimal. You are choosing which room to tackle next, occasionally managing which tool to use for a given surface type, and that is roughly the ceiling. The 82% positive Steam rating from over two thousand reviews confirms the formula connects with a real audience, but that audience is specifically looking for low-pressure tactile satisfaction rather than optimization puzzles. The Metacritic score of 68 reflects that critics tend to penalize shallow mechanics even when the execution is clean, and that is a fair tension to acknowledge. If you open this expecting the systemic depth of a proper sim, you will bounce off it quickly. Where the game does earn genuine credit is in how it handles accessibility. There is no punishing tutorial, no failure state that resets your progress, and no timer pressuring you to rush. You can leave a half-renovated platform, go grab a coffee, come back, and pick up exactly where you left off. For someone wanting a no-commitment session between heavier games, that structure is quietly well-designed. The visual feedback when a space transforms from dilapidated wreck to clean station is genuinely pleasing, and the railway setting gives the game a niche identity that separates it from the broader cleaning-sim crowd. Fans of historic infrastructure or anyone with a soft spot for rail heritage will get an extra layer of charm from the theming that a purely mechanical assessment would miss. The weaknesses are real: the AI in the limited NPC elements is essentially non-existent, mod support is not a feature here, and the late-game content does not introduce meaningful new mechanics - just larger stations with more of the same tasks. If you finish three stations and feel the loop getting repetitive, adding five more will not change that feeling. The game is exactly as wide and shallow as it looks on the store page, and that honesty is refreshing compared to titles that oversell their depth. Approach it correctly - short sessions, no spreadsheet required - and it delivers what it promises. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamCleaning SimRenovationRelaxingFirst-PersonTask-Based ProgressionRailwayShort SessionsNo Fail State

System Requirements

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
68
Steam
82%(2,724)

Game Info

Developer
Live Motion Games
Publisher
PlayWay S.A.
Release Date
Oct 1, 2020

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