Compare Winter Resort Simulator prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Simuverse Interactive. Published by Aerosoft GmbH. Released on 12/12/2019. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Indie, Simulation.

If grooming slopes with a licensed PistenBully and manually operating a Doppelmayr gondola panel sounds like a Saturday well spent, this sim was built specifically for you - rough edges and all.

I have a soft spot for simulators that commit fully to one obsessive niche, and Winter Resort Simulator commits hard. Rather than delivering a broad resort-tycoon experience, it narrows its focus to the operational layer of running an alpine ski area: you are the person in the machine room, not the executive behind the spreadsheet. That means climbing into Pistenbully snowcats to groom runs, manually working the Doppelmayr Connect ropeway control panels, and juggling guest satisfaction scores while keeping the economy ticking over. The six-square-kilometre map of Hallstein comes with five pre-defined Doppelmayr ropeway systems - D-Line gondolas, CWA Omega V carriers, DCD6 and DCD8 chair variants - all recreated with real-brand licensing. You can also hop on skis and ride the slopes yourself, which is a neat loop when you have just spent an hour grooming them. Who should be looking at this? Sim fans who find satisfaction in authentic operational detail - the same crowd that reads Farming Simulator patch notes and owns physical train timetables. The ropeway panels alone represent a level of fidelity that most casual sim titles skip entirely, and Steam players have rewarded that with a Very Positive rating across several hundred reviews. Career mode gives you structured missions; free play lets you design your own ropeway routes. That split is a sensible onboarding ramp - start with the guided tasks, learn the economy loop, then experiment. The tutorial is functional enough to get you running without too much confusion, though it does not hold your hand through every edge case. The criticisms are real and worth naming. At launch, player feedback flagged awkward vehicle handling, weak controller support, and some rough-around-the-edges physics for first-person skiing. One critic described it as feeling closer to early access than a fully finished release, and that sentiment showed up in early Steam reviews too. The ropeway detail drew consistent praise; everything outside of it drew more scrutiny. If you are primarily here to carve powder, the skiing itself will likely disappoint - the sim's heart is in operations, not the downhill experience. Context also matters here: Winter Resort Simulator 2 has since launched with a more polished economy system, multiplayer, Steam Workshop support, and a broader vehicle roster. This original entry is the leaner, rougher starting point in the series. Knowing that a sequel exists - and that WRS 3 has been announced with Unreal Engine 5 - changes the value calculation. The first game is best treated as the foundational document for a franchise that has steadily improved with each release, not as the definitive version of the experience. For die-hard ropeway and snowcat enthusiasts who want every entry, it still carries genuine technical interest. For everyone else, the sequel is the smarter starting point. Diego, Scout Team

Winter Resort Simulator
CasualIndieSimulation

Winter Resort Simulator

Dec 12, 2019Simuverse InteractiveAerosoft GmbH
GamerScout Says

If grooming slopes with a licensed PistenBully and manually operating a Doppelmayr gondola panel sounds like a Saturday well spent, this sim was built specifically for you - rough edges and all.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Winter Resort Simulator

I have a soft spot for simulators that commit fully to one obsessive niche, and Winter Resort Simulator commits hard. Rather than delivering a broad resort-tycoon experience, it narrows its focus to the operational layer of running an alpine ski area: you are the person in the machine room, not the executive behind the spreadsheet. That means climbing into Pistenbully snowcats to groom runs, manually working the Doppelmayr Connect ropeway control panels, and juggling guest satisfaction scores while keeping the economy ticking over. The six-square-kilometre map of Hallstein comes with five pre-defined Doppelmayr ropeway systems - D-Line gondolas, CWA Omega V carriers, DCD6 and DCD8 chair variants - all recreated with real-brand licensing. You can also hop on skis and ride the slopes yourself, which is a neat loop when you have just spent an hour grooming them. Who should be looking at this? Sim fans who find satisfaction in authentic operational detail - the same crowd that reads Farming Simulator patch notes and owns physical train timetables. The ropeway panels alone represent a level of fidelity that most casual sim titles skip entirely, and Steam players have rewarded that with a Very Positive rating across several hundred reviews. Career mode gives you structured missions; free play lets you design your own ropeway routes. That split is a sensible onboarding ramp - start with the guided tasks, learn the economy loop, then experiment. The tutorial is functional enough to get you running without too much confusion, though it does not hold your hand through every edge case. The criticisms are real and worth naming. At launch, player feedback flagged awkward vehicle handling, weak controller support, and some rough-around-the-edges physics for first-person skiing. One critic described it as feeling closer to early access than a fully finished release, and that sentiment showed up in early Steam reviews too. The ropeway detail drew consistent praise; everything outside of it drew more scrutiny. If you are primarily here to carve powder, the skiing itself will likely disappoint - the sim's heart is in operations, not the downhill experience. Context also matters here: Winter Resort Simulator 2 has since launched with a more polished economy system, multiplayer, Steam Workshop support, and a broader vehicle roster. This original entry is the leaner, rougher starting point in the series. Knowing that a sequel exists - and that WRS 3 has been announced with Unreal Engine 5 - changes the value calculation. The first game is best treated as the foundational document for a franchise that has steadily improved with each release, not as the definitive version of the experience. For die-hard ropeway and snowcat enthusiasts who want every entry, it still carries genuine technical interest. For everyone else, the sequel is the smarter starting point. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertier:indieRopeway OperationSnowcat DrivingAlpine ManagementCareer ModeFree PlayResort EconomyLicensed VehiclesSlope Grooming

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Playable

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Win 7/8.1/10 (64Bit)
Memory
4096 MB RAM
Storage
4 GB available space
Graphics
AMD/NVIDIA dedicated graphic card, with at least 2048MB of dedicated VRAM and Shader Model 5.1 support. AMD R7 265 and NVIDIA GeForce GTX 750 Ti or newer architectures are recommended.
Processor
AMD / Intel dual-core (with hyper-threading) CPU, running at 3 GHz (AMD FX 4100 series or Intel Core i3-2000 series or newer architectures are recommended)
Sound Card
Integrated or dedicated DirectX 9 compatible soundcard
Additional Notes
Keyboard, mouse and internet connection for Steam

Recommended

OS
Win 10 (64Bit)
Memory
8192 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
4 GB available space
Graphics
AMD/NVIDIA dedicated graphic card, with at least 2048 / 4096MB of dedicated VRAM (or more) and Shader Model 5.1 support. ATI/AMD Radeon HD 7870 and NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti or newer architectures are recommended.
Processor
AMD / Intel quad-core processor running at 3.5 GHz (AMD Athlon X4 950 series or Intel Core i5 3000 series or newer architectures are recommended)
Sound Card
Integrated or dedicated DirectX 9 compatible soundcard
Additional Notes
Keyboard, mouse and internet connection for Steam.

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Game Info

Developer
Simuverse Interactive
Publisher
Aerosoft GmbH
Release Date
Dec 12, 2019

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What platforms is Winter Resort Simulator available on?

Winter Resort Simulator is available on PC.

When was Winter Resort Simulator released?

Winter Resort Simulator was released on 12 December 2019.

Who developed Winter Resort Simulator?

Winter Resort Simulator was developed by Simuverse Interactive and published by Aerosoft GmbH.