
Used Cars Simulator
If you have ever watched a car-flipping show and thought 'I could run that hustle better', this is the sim that lets you test that theory, legally or otherwise.
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About Used Cars Simulator
I spend a lot of my sim hours optimising production chains and tax brackets, so when a business loop this tactile landed in my queue I gave it serious attention. Used Cars Simulator puts you in the shoes of a broke opportunist working out of a shed in an abandoned open-world city, and the core loop is genuinely well-constructed for an early-access title: spot a wreck, inspect it panel by panel to find leverage for negotiation, haul it back to your garage, fix it up with dent-hammering, powerwashing, painting, and parts-swapping, photograph it, post an ad online, field multiple buyer offers, then deliver without dinging the bodywork on the way over. Every step has a decision attached, and that decision chain is where the game earns its sim credentials. The business progression layer holds up reasonably well for where the game currently sits. A three-branch skill tree covers haggling on the buy side, haggling on the sell side, and general operational efficiency, so early points matter. Sourcing is split between a legal route (browsing the in-game computer or finding parked wrecks in the world and negotiating face to face) and a grey-market route that involves police attention and police evasion. The tension between margin optimisation on the clean path and risk management on the illegal one gives the economy a small but real strategic dimension. Reviewers have flagged that the car roster at launch is limited, though DreamWay has signalled ongoing expansion through the early access period, which is about the only reassurance available given there are no community review scores to anchor expectations yet. On the open-world side, the sandbox earns its keep through side activities: drift trials, stunt jumps, and police chases feed an online leaderboard, and there are odd-job diversions like metal-detecting in the desert. The physics feel deliberately loose rather than simulation-grade, which is fine because the game is never trying to be a driving sim. What it resembles most is a lighter, more open-world version of Car Mechanic Simulator with criminal options and a questline layered on top. The questline itself is thin as a story vehicle, but it works as a tutorial scaffold that introduces mechanics at a sensible pace, which new players will appreciate more than they might expect. The weaknesses are real and worth pricing into your decision. Visually the game is rough: character models are basic, textures unrefined, and world geometry pops in as you drive. The hunger, thirst, and bladder survival meters sit awkwardly inside a car-trading loop that has no need for them. The PlayWay launcher has caused Steam Deck compatibility friction for at least some players, so deck owners should verify before buying. Audio is a genuine bright spot: voice acting is serviceable, sound effects are realistic, and the in-car radio pulls from multiple music genres rather than looping two tracks into your skull. DreamWay has been actively patching and running community surveys through Discord, which is the kind of developer engagement that historically correlates with early-access titles that actually improve. For sim players specifically: the depth ceiling right now is modest compared to a full management game, but the tactile feedback of the repair loop and the negotiation mini-game make the time feel earned. The early-access discount exists precisely because the content slate is incomplete. If you are the type who buys into PlayWay sims early and watches them grow, the foundation here is solid enough to justify the entry cost. If you need a finished product, the notes say to wait, and that advice is correct. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
Steam Deck & Linux
Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 3 ProtonDB community reports.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Win10 64bit
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- Storage
- 20 GB available space
- Graphics
- GTX1050ti / R9 280
- Processor
- i3-4130 @ 3.3GHz / AMD FX-8350
- Additional Notes
- System Requirements subject to change as development continues
Recommended
- OS
- Win10 64bit
- Memory
- 16 GB RAM
- Storage
- 24 GB available space
- Graphics
- Nvidia RTX 3060 or AMD Radeon RX 5700
- Processor
- i7-9700 @ 3.6 GHz or Ryzen 5 3600 @ 3.6 GHz
- Additional Notes
- System Requirements subject to change as development continues
Community Discussion
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Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- DreamWay Games
- Publisher
- PlayWay S.A.
- Release Date
- Apr 9, 2025