
Winter Resort Simulator 2
Grooming slopes, spinning up chairlifts, and watching your economy tick over - this is a sim for people who find operational detail genuinely relaxing, not a chore.
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About Winter Resort Simulator 2
I have a soft spot for simulators that commit fully to their lane, and Winter Resort Simulator 2 commits so hard it will occasionally lose you in a sea of switch panels and snowcat controls. You are not a ski resort tycoon clicking menus from a bird's-eye view. You are the operator: physically driving a Pistenbully or Prinoth snowcat up a slope at 2 AM, positioning a TechnoAlpin snow cannon, and manually cycling through a multi-step startup sequence on a Doppelmayr gondola before the first guests load in. That level of procedural commitment is exactly what fans of this sub-genre are paying for, and the community has rewarded it with a Very Positive rating sitting at around 84% across over a thousand Steam reviews. The economic layer gives the hands-on work some strategic context. Guest satisfaction feeds directly into your revenue, which in turn funds new ropeways, expanded restaurant capacity, and additional snow production hardware. Day-night cycles and dynamic weather mean you cannot set things on autopilot - a sudden snowstorm demands snowcat deployment, and a warm spell might tank your slope quality ratings faster than you can compensate. It is not the deepest management simulation I have ever touched, but the feedback loop between operating the machines and watching your resort metrics respond is tight enough to stay engaging over many sessions. For newcomers, the tutorial deserves an honest warning. It covers a lot of ground, from driving a pickup to provisioning a mountain restaurant to initialising a chairlift step by step, and some players find the pacing inconsistent: granular on the wrong details, vague on broader resort strategy. Push through it. The underlying systems are learnable, and once you understand what each vehicle type actually does for slope condition and guest flow, the game opens up considerably. Multiplayer co-op lets you split roles across a group - one player running slope grooming while another operates cable cars - which dramatically reduces the cognitive load for newcomers and makes the whole thing feel like a proper operational team exercise. Where the game shows its indie budget is in edge-case physics fidelity. Some reviewers note that terrain differences between groomed and ungroomed snow are not always as tactile as the snowcat animations suggest. Slope construction via the in-game editor also has a steep learning curve of its own, with a Lua-based workflow that community veterans will navigate comfortably but that will baffle anyone expecting a drag-and-drop interface. Performance is another variable: the game can be CPU-hungry on larger maps, and players report that the experience improves substantially on mid-to-high-end hardware. On the upside, the Steam Workshop is genuinely active, offering new vehicles, ropeways, full resort maps, and additional missions. Licensed hardware from Pistenbully, Prinoth, Doppelmayr, and TechnoAlpin gives the vehicle roster real-world authenticity that the sim crowd genuinely appreciates. Bottom line for strategy and sim players: approach this as an operational sim first and a management game second. The economy is real but shallow; the machine operation is where the hours go. If you have ever wanted to understand how a ski resort actually functions from the maintenance side, this is the most detailed PC recreation of that experience available. Bring a friend for multiplayer co-op if you can, skip the DLC on a first run, and be patient with the tutorial. Diego, Scout Team
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Steam Deck & Linux
Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 7 ProtonDB community reports.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Microsoft Windows 7 / 8 / 10 (64bit)
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 11
- Storage
- 12 GB available space
- Graphics
- 4 GB VRAM, Shader Model 5.1
- Processor
- Dual Core with 3,0 GHz and Hyper Threading
Recommended
- Memory
- 16 GB RAM
- Processor
- Quad Core with 3,5 GHz recommended
Community Discussion
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Reviews & Ratings
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Game Info
- Developer
- Simuverse Interactive
- Publisher
- Aerosoft GmbH
- Release Date
- Nov 26, 2020
