Compare Trainz Simulator 12 prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by N3V Games. Published by N3V Games. Released on 6/8/2011. Available on PC. Genres: Single Player, Simulation.

Part train driver, part railroad architect, part community content browser. TS12 is the widest entry point in the Trainz series, but its age shows in almost every frame.

Trainz Simulator 12 is a railroad simulation and construction sandbox released by N3V Games in 2011. It sits at an odd intersection: part driving sim, part route editor, part community platform. You can pick a pre-built route and drive a diesel or steam locomotive from point A to point B, or you can fire up Surveyor Mode and build your own railroad from scratch, terraforming terrain, laying track, placing industries, and scripting freight scenarios where your crew hauls coal from a mine to an industrial yard. The two driving modes split the audience cleanly. DCC mode is a simplified, approachable layer that works like a digital model railroad controller, and Cab mode adds throttle notching, brake pressure, and speed limit enforcement that will actually end your run if you push past limits on a posted section. Neither mode reaches the simulation depth of contemporaries like Dovetail's Train Simulator line, but the breadth of content you can access offsets a lot of that gap. The community angle is where TS12 had a genuine, numbers-backed argument. The Trainz Download Station hosts a massive library of user-created assets, and the free section dwarfs the paid catalog by a ratio that would make most live-service games blush. Locomotives, routes, scenario scripts, and scenery props all flow through it, and N3V confirmed compatibility with over 90% of existing Download Station content at launch. That ecosystem is the real reason dedicated fans stay. Route variety at release already spanned the Southern China main line, the ECML Kings Cross to Newcastle corridor, the Mojave Sub Division with prototypical 1990s ATSF and SP freight diesels including the GP60M and SD40T, and a Municipal Transit Railway covering streetcars and elevated commuter rail. On paper, that is a solid opening hand. The problems are real and not trivial. Physics is the biggest structural weakness. Trains do not derail on overcooked curves, collisions lack consequence, and the jointed-track sound loops in a way that grates within minutes. Optimization never caught up with the scope N3V was aiming for, meaning framerate performance can become painful even on hardware that exceeds the listed requirements. Database rebuild times at startup drew consistent complaints from players, sometimes adding an hour of wait before a session even begins. Sound quality is inconsistent across the locomotive roster, interiors range from polished to visibly unfinished, and some bundled scenarios contain signal scripting bugs. These are not edge cases discovered by power users - they show up in the first hour of play. For a newcomer asking whether TS12 is a sensible entry point in 2025, the honest answer involves context. Later Trainz titles and N3V's ongoing Trainz Plus subscription have superseded it in every technical dimension. If your goal is accurate cab simulation with tight physics, Dovetail's Train Simulator series gives you that at the cost of DLC dependency. If your goal is a creative sandbox where you build entire railroads, author missions, and tap a community library with years of accumulated content, TS12 still delivers that loop in a form that works. The floor is low, the ceiling on the building side is genuinely high, and the Download Station keeps the content variable interesting. Go in with calibrated expectations: this is an older title carrying real technical debt, and the reward curve belongs firmly to the patient, creative type who wants to own the timetable rather than just ride it. Diego, Scout Team

Trainz Simulator 12
Single PlayerSimulation

Trainz Simulator 12

Jun 8, 2011N3V Games
GamerScout Says

Part train driver, part railroad architect, part community content browser. TS12 is the widest entry point in the Trainz series, but its age shows in almost every frame.

PC
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €1.58

GamerScout Verdict

Best for patient, creative players who want to build and script railroads rather than chase a polished driving simulation.

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About Trainz Simulator 12

Trainz Simulator 12 is a railroad simulation and construction sandbox released by N3V Games in 2011. It sits at an odd intersection: part driving sim, part route editor, part community platform. You can pick a pre-built route and drive a diesel or steam locomotive from point A to point B, or you can fire up Surveyor Mode and build your own railroad from scratch, terraforming terrain, laying track, placing industries, and scripting freight scenarios where your crew hauls coal from a mine to an industrial yard. The two driving modes split the audience cleanly. DCC mode is a simplified, approachable layer that works like a digital model railroad controller, and Cab mode adds throttle notching, brake pressure, and speed limit enforcement that will actually end your run if you push past limits on a posted section. Neither mode reaches the simulation depth of contemporaries like Dovetail's Train Simulator line, but the breadth of content you can access offsets a lot of that gap. The community angle is where TS12 had a genuine, numbers-backed argument. The Trainz Download Station hosts a massive library of user-created assets, and the free section dwarfs the paid catalog by a ratio that would make most live-service games blush. Locomotives, routes, scenario scripts, and scenery props all flow through it, and N3V confirmed compatibility with over 90% of existing Download Station content at launch. That ecosystem is the real reason dedicated fans stay. Route variety at release already spanned the Southern China main line, the ECML Kings Cross to Newcastle corridor, the Mojave Sub Division with prototypical 1990s ATSF and SP freight diesels including the GP60M and SD40T, and a Municipal Transit Railway covering streetcars and elevated commuter rail. On paper, that is a solid opening hand. The problems are real and not trivial. Physics is the biggest structural weakness. Trains do not derail on overcooked curves, collisions lack consequence, and the jointed-track sound loops in a way that grates within minutes. Optimization never caught up with the scope N3V was aiming for, meaning framerate performance can become painful even on hardware that exceeds the listed requirements. Database rebuild times at startup drew consistent complaints from players, sometimes adding an hour of wait before a session even begins. Sound quality is inconsistent across the locomotive roster, interiors range from polished to visibly unfinished, and some bundled scenarios contain signal scripting bugs. These are not edge cases discovered by power users - they show up in the first hour of play. For a newcomer asking whether TS12 is a sensible entry point in 2025, the honest answer involves context. Later Trainz titles and N3V's ongoing Trainz Plus subscription have superseded it in every technical dimension. If your goal is accurate cab simulation with tight physics, Dovetail's Train Simulator series gives you that at the cost of DLC dependency. If your goal is a creative sandbox where you build entire railroads, author missions, and tap a community library with years of accumulated content, TS12 still delivers that loop in a form that works. The floor is low, the ceiling on the building side is genuinely high, and the Download Station keeps the content variable interesting. Go in with calibrated expectations: this is an older title carrying real technical debt, and the reward curve belongs firmly to the patient, creative type who wants to own the timetable rather than just ride it.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Tags

steamRailroad BuilderSurveyor ModeDCC ModeCab ModeDownload StationCommunity ContentFreight ScenariosMultiplayer Co-opRoute Editor

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
1 GB RAM
DirectX
9.0c
Storage
16 GB hard drive space
Graphics
nVidia GeForce 7200/128MB
Processor
Pentium D 3.4GHz (or equiv)
System requirements
Windows XP SP3 / Vista / Windows 7

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Game Info

Developer
N3V Games
Publisher
N3V Games
Release Date
Jun 8, 2011

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Frequently asked questions about Trainz Simulator 12

How much does Trainz Simulator 12 cost?

Trainz Simulator 12 pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

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What platforms is Trainz Simulator 12 available on?

Trainz Simulator 12 is available on PC.

When was Trainz Simulator 12 released?

Trainz Simulator 12 was released on 8 June 2011.

Who developed Trainz Simulator 12?

Trainz Simulator 12 was developed by N3V Games.