Truck Simulation 19
Haul licensed rigs across a vast US map and build your fleet
Haul licensed rigs across a vast US map and build your fleet
Truck Simulation 19 puts long haul trucking front and center, delivering a grounded, detail-focused experience from a studio known for lifelike simulators. You start as a lone driver taking contracts across a condensed United States, then grow into a company owner with multiple rigs and employees. The hook is authenticity: Kenworth and Mack trucks are officially licensed, and their cabs are packed with working elements like an air horn, indicators, lights and cruise control, so every trip feels hands on.
The map spans more than 30 cities linked by highways and backroads, with scenery that moves from farmlands to sunbaked deserts. Jobs assign everything from construction equipment and farm machinery to food, medical supplies and military loads, even an aircraft. Completing routes grants rewards, and special transport assignments stack on extra challenge. As you progress, new regions unlock, opening the journey from the East Coast toward the far reaches of the country.
Beyond driving, there is a management layer that lets you buy new trucks, hire additional drivers and expand with depots and hubs. The road is not without friction: fatigue, changing weather and a day-night cycle demand planning, while limited fuel, AI traffic and potential violations keep you honest. You can rest at motels and refuel to stay in business. Control options include a tilt or virtual wheel and arrows setup, or a slider, so you can tailor steering to taste.
It is a rich package with long roads, sharp truck models and scenic vistas, but it comes with trade-offs. The theme can feel repetitive if you are not into realistic hauling, graphical customization is limited, and the large world and detailed vehicles may ask a lot from your device. Onboarding is light too, so newcomers might need patience to settle into the cab.
Developer
astragon Entertainment GmbH
OS
Version
1.7
License
Free