Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Timeless fun -- like "SimCity" for buses, trains, ships and planes!, June 17, 2006
Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars
Yes, an oldie but definitely a goodie! From the same genius behind RollerCoaster Tycoon comes Transport Tycoon Deluxe, a much-expanded and improved version of the original Transport Tycoon. Build, micro-manage, and compete against the computer (or solo play) to establish your own transportation empire! Lay down roads and rails, then add buses & trucks, trains and planes, all to get passengers and cargo where it needs to go! Special emphasis on trains, with steam, electric & diesel engines, plus passenger, mail, wood, goods, coal, oil and many more freight cars. Maglev trains, Concorde planes, ferries, helicopters, too. Exhaustive details (with screenshots!) available at Wikipedia, but simply, an excellent involving game.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A timeless classic, April 19, 2009
Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars
Transport Tycoon is a fairly old game, but it has held up pretty well. The premise is that you're managing a transportation company (bus, truck, train, airplane, ship, monorail), and the cities and industries you serve end up growing. In a sense this is the inverse of SimCity, where you manage the cities and industries, but not the transportation.
The original game is designed for DOS; I recommend OpenTTD, an open source enhancement that fixes bugs, improves the UI, works on Windows/Mac/Linux, adds lots of features, supports larger maps, and has extensions (new graphics, buildings, vehicles, and industries). OpenTTD reuses components of the original game, so buy and install Transport Tycoon Deluxe, then run OpenTTD instead of the original executable. Another alternative is TTDPatch, which also builds on the original.
I gave this 4 stars instead of 5 because the AI players aren't very good. You can also play multiplayer, either cooperatively or competitively, but I play single player, with no AIs, essentially in a "sandbox" game (once you get past the first decade, money isn't a problem). The most recent OpenTTD has some player-contributed AI players, so we might see better AIs soon.
The challenges in sandbox mode are of your own making. You might decide to work on a "realistic" track layout, or high capacity, or passenger-only, or high profit, or any number of other goals. In some ways it's like gardening, where you plant things, watch them grow, and watch for and remove pests and weeds, but it's for a giant virtual train set. I'm always looking for inefficiencies, track problems, congestion, broken trains, etc., and making improvements everywhere. Also see the advanced layouts page on [...] to get a sense of some of the kinds of things you can build.
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2 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Not compatible with Window of any kind. Run in DOS mode! , May 25, 2006
Fun:1.0 out of 5 stars
I picked up this game yesterday at my local thrift store for .50. It was in excellent condition. I was excited, because I am a fan of Chris Sawyer. I love his RCT games. But this game is sooooooo old, it was made in 1997 and it says in the insert that it must run in DOS mode. I can't get it to run on my machine. I don't know how to do DOS> Just a head's up for those of you who don't know either. I'm sure this game is awesome, and I know I won't be disappointed, IF I can get it to run! Be cautious. This game is OLD. It actually says in the insert that it was made BEFORE Windows was made.
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