Hi all,
I just discovered Simutrans, but I have not tried it yet. I am very familiar with OpenTTD (and a translator of it), so my first thought is naturally to compare it to OpenTTD.
I suppose all of you in here of course think Simutrans is the better of the two? Could someone tell me some pros and cons of the games?
In my opinion, OpenTTD looks much better, but that is because it uses the original TTD graphics. Simutrans seems to come with its own graphics which is of course an advantage, license-wise. Would you say Simutrans is more or less complete than OpenTTD?
Thomas
In my case. It's not a hard decission. I choose Simutrans with no doubt. OTTD graphics seem weird to me, although it has some cool things like the possibility of building insame bridge networks.
Here you have some other references:
- simutrans or open transport tycoon? (http://archive.forum.simutrans.com/topic/04389.0/index.html) discussion from the archive.
- Independent comparison (http://freegamer.blogspot.com/2009/02/simulate-this-city-building-tycoon-game.html) from a OTTD player that includes several Transport Simulation Games like OTTD, Simutrans, FreeTrain, FreeRails 2,etc..
A random list of difference that come to my mind
- in simutrans, everything (goods, p****engers) has a destination
- in simutrans you can build arbitrary underground structures, with some effort you can do some things also over ground (elevated structures)
- in simutrans you can play graphic sets of different sizes
- in simutrans trains etc always find a route to their target if one exists
The most notable difference (besides GUI design) for a TTD-player is track laying: in difference to TTD, you do not need to build every possible connection on one tile by hand. Also close diagonal tracks as in TTD are not possible in Simutrans.
And no multiplayer feature in Simutrans.
My 2c:
1) Destinations for cargo -> Simutrans forces you (far more) to comply with demand, not move things at your will
2) Precalculated vehicle routing and fixed route coordinates (as opposed to on the fly in ttd) -> very different station-building-fu.
3) Different approach to construction of ways -> initial frustration with that.
simutrans can OpenTTD/OpenGfx grafics
demo from pak.ttd (http://forum.simutrans.com/index.php?topic=868.msg26813#msg26813) sorry, posting is german
Hi there, last night I finished writing a page on exactly this topic. OpenTTD vs Simutrans | The Linux Transport Simulation Showdown (http://www.squidoo.com/linux-transport-simulation-showdown). Perhaps that will aid your decision - it has screenshots of both, and the pro's and cons from someone who has spent reasonable time playing each. I have actually come from playing OpenTTD to discovering Simutrans, and for the reasons stated in the page, Simutrans comes off better.
Cheers,
Danny
.. which is quite surprising (and encouraging :) ).
As to the crashes you mention: please check a newer nightly.
Thanks for all your input. I downloaded Simutrans to give it a try. I only tried it a few minutes so far. My first impressions are:
- The user interface surprised and frustrated me a little, but that's probably just because I am used to OpenTTD
- It's awfully silent
- The graphics seem to have very few colours - IMO it doesn't look good
Some of the more technical things mentioned sound like Simutrans could be more interesting though, so I will try it some more when I get time for it. I have bot checked out dannystaple's comparison yet...
Thomas
Technically, Simutrans allows for about 32000 colors plus a few special colors. If I remember correctly TTD graphics use 256 colors.
But these are technical aspects, how many colors are used in the images, and how well they are used depends on the artists who painted the images. I'm not trying to defend Simutrans graphics, juts trying to explain that your impression is not really a limit of the Simutrans graphics engine, but choice of the image creators.
This is also not true anymore: openTTD has a 32bbp renderer, but the "pak" for that is still not complete, so the main pak is still 256 colors (+ non-free)
ThomasA maybe you should have a look at the pak128 pakset, I find that one graphically more appealing than pak64 (default simutrans pak).
I find pak96comic to be the best, visually. :)
But... I like bits of *all* of them - honestly. And it's nice to have such different options...
Complete agreement. Choice is power is innovation is just the way I like it (tm) ;)
Which pakset did you use? Some paksets are more colourful than others. Also, I am not familliar with OTTD: what sorts of sounds can one hear in that?
The original Transport Tycoon had very nice background sound themes. But they are copyrighted.
I think that, these days, in terms of music, it is far easier and more preferable for people to listen to their own CDs/MP3s/Oggs/etc. whilst playing the game than have music built into the game. The tradition of built-in music comes, I think, from the days when games were run on single tasking operating systems that could not, for example, play a CD in the background.
You can still compile Simutrans for DOS using Allegro if I did not break something since last year. Albeit with 64MB main memory large maps will be out of question ...
I'm not sure if you are right. A event bounded music system like the german game "Verkehrsgigant" it have, when you here sound when the enviroment require this sounds, this is very nice. Like when you next to a football station you here the fans shouting, or when you are next to a cinema ...
The problem is there are very less people who could make sounds, and without this people improving Simutrans sound system is useless.
I am mostly playing with Pak128 myself, but I also grok that pak64 is the most feature full and official pack. I may have to find out a bit more about contributing to the project (yes I found that page already - just got to find time to look at it) - I may be able to look at the sounds....
Adding environment sound is easy. I did some sound editing, but with two children and a non-working headphone connector on my PC editing sound is nearly impossible at the moment.
Danny,
would you be interested in contributing to pak128.Britain (http://forum.simutrans.com/index.php?board=51.0)?
I am just using the standard pakset that came with the game as I downloaded it. I will check out the other sets too.
Apart from the music, which IMO is great, all the vehicles in OTTD (TT) have sounds when they start and stop. Some find it annoying I guess, especially if you are looking at a section of the map with a lot of traffic, but I quite like all those little sounds.
Starting sounds are possible (for ages) in simu, but they aren'T used very often. Most people do only the gaphics for new vehicles and don't think about sounds (me too, no doubt). But after a while these sounds become annoying anyway, so people turn them off.
The problem of them being annoying is one of which I am aware; I strongly suspect that it substantially reduces uptake of this feature. Firstly, the sounds could do with being a little quieter and more subtle, which is a matter for pakset authors. But, secondly, in a busy area, they are played far too often and become extremely annoying by being repetitious. In the most recent version of Simutrans-Experimental, I have addressed this: now, the vehicle starting noises do not play if another vehicle starting noise has played within the last 10-30 seconds (the point within that range is randomised).
I have taken the sounds conversation to a new thread - http://forum.simutrans.com/index.php?topic=2787.msg27822#msg27822 (http://forum.simutrans.com/index.php?topic=2787.msg27822#msg27822) since I am interested in taking that forward.
I have found this article. http://www.squidoo.com/linux-transport-simulation-showdown
You have just missed this topic: http://forum.simutrans.com/index.php?topic=2743.15
;D
Sorry. Please delete this thread.
Never mind. Merging is better. :)
@dannystaple: Your article has become famous!! I've seen it announced at the Linux Game Tome (http://happypenguin.org/newsitem?id=9528), so congratulations dannystaple!
One small problem with that- he put it up - it says: submitted by dannystaple. :P
Well, in that case he already knows he has become famous... ::)
One thing that really make OTTD special is the interface design.
Such as original font, color shcemed windows, minimalistic button placement and such.
Obviously it was a commercial game originally. It just is well designed.
I personally want(and wish) to attract more people from OTTD though.
I guess people there are attached deeply to magical atmosphere of TTD.
Music, graphic, interface, sound effect and vehicles. They all match perfectly. I admit this, really.
But I believe ST will provide more complexity for long time users.
And this genre of game has something common with model rairoad hobby.
As model railroad is deep as it is also the ST and OTTD.
I can tell that this hobby will last long for its multiple properties.
Growth, network,financial management, planning, graphics, scenary, creation and sharing.
And it is good to see and get to know people who share the same interest.
I have to be honest, I know what colonyan means, but the interface design is as much a millstone as special for TTD too. Consider that the font issue means that it cannot offer a PAK selection screen like Simutrans does - the font is in the graphics files, and they will not use system fonts.
I am getting to know some of the limitations well as I look at junction building in both games comparatively - there is a junction database in the OpenTTD wiki that I have been raiding for ideas for Simutrans junctions. I have been building an article on it - so far with only some basics, but I have some neat junctions to write up once I have perfected them.
i've played openTTD for quite a while before switching to simutrans about half a year ago.
for me the two most important features available only in one of the games are:
path based signals
(a bit similar in function to platform choose signals)
absolutely great in OTTD, missing in simutrans. they make realistic double, or multiple track layouts possible.
destinations for p****engers and cargo:
in OTTD i could transport goods arbitrarily over the map. creating rather unrealistic networks, and money generators. cargo with destination is the main reason for me to prefer simutrans. (simutrans experimental takes it even a bit further)
Let me comment on one of your observations:
The difference here is not due to different signal systems, but the way how vehicles calculate their routes: in simutrans vehicles calculate their route before starting at a station and they will not take another route if another vehicle blocks them, in Openttd this is handled differently. This makes overtaking of trains in multiple track layout almost impossible in Simutrans.
In the long run perhaps simutrans could get a better dispatching model. Dispatching is actually a hard problem, which is why real railroads *still* use human dispatchers. But it's an incredibly *entertaining* problem, so it might be one which people would enjoy working on. :-D
Ok, some stuff to fuel this thread: Google trend for Simutrans versus OpenTTD
http://www.google.com/trends?q=OpenTTD+|+%22open+ttd%22%2C+Simutrans&ctab=0&geo=all&date=all&sort=0 (http://www.google.com/trends?q=OpenTTD+|+%22open+ttd%22%2C+Simutrans&ctab=0&geo=all&date=all&sort=0)
Interestingly Simutrans leads completely in Japan and Hongkong while OpenTTD is more searched. (Nasty comment would be: It is more difficult to handle. And honestly, for my first TTD trains I had to search the wiki to start them.)
And there is a recent thread in the OpenTTD forum about this: http://www.tt-forums.net/viewtopic.php?f=29&t=42337
Interestingly the very last comment was from a formerly quite active OpenTTD member: Brianetta. But not sure if this really helps. I certainly found it crazy to have two communities of nearly the same in parallel.
In new revisions (not the release candidate RC), there will be the possibility to build
- tunnels without building the way at their start tile first
- bridges by clicking at the startand then dragging with the mouse
Both things should make the change from Openttd to Simutrans easier.