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Euro Truck Simulator 2
Euro Truck Simulator 2 is a vehicle simulation game and a direct sequel to the 2008 game Euro Truck Simulator. Travel across Europe as king of the road, a truc…
I’ll admit, the second I saw SCS Software’s cryptic teaser for Euro Truck Simulator 2, my inner transit nerd did a double take. After years of mods and hopeful speculation, the studio is finally hinting at official coach and bus support. And for a game that’s quietly dominated Steam’s charts for more than a decade, this is the kind of long-requested update that could open up ETS2 to a whole new crowd of sim fans-if SCS gets it right.
| Feature | Specification |
|---|---|
| Publisher | SCS Software |
| Release Date | TBA (Coach/Bus Update) |
| Genres | Simulation, Driving |
| Platforms | PC |

Honestly, this isn’t just a minor content drop for Euro Truck Simulator 2. For as long as I’ve been following the game, bus and coach mods have been some of the most popular add-ons—so SCS embracing this officially is a big deal. The teaser itself is smartly minimal: a coach drives out from behind a truck, paired with a passport and travel guide in the trailer’s imagery, and the studio’s blog talks about “a new way to experience the world of Euro Truck Simulator 2.” No release date, no hard promises, just enough to set the speculation engines (and forums) on fire.

Here’s why this matters: ETS2 has been about more than just hauling freight for a while. The real joy is in the journey—the zen of long, uneventful miles punctuated by the challenge of tricky maneuvers and the slow satisfaction of building out your company. Coaches and buses open up a whole new gameplay loop. Imagine picking up passengers in Paris, making scheduled stops, dealing with traffic (and maybe a few screaming kids), plus handling the quirks of coach driving. This isn’t a mere reskin—it’s a whole new logistics layer, and if SCS delivers, it could reignite the community for years.

Of course, I’m keeping my expectations in check. There’s a world of difference between driving a truck and managing a coach full of passengers. The best bus sims out there (think OMSI 2 or Bus Simulator 21) live and die by the little details: ticketing, passenger behavior, even toilets and luggage. Will SCS dive deep, or keep it surface-level? The presence of official bus stations in most ETS2 cities gives me hope this won’t be a half-baked add-on, but we need to see more before declaring it a revolution.

There’s also the timing: SCS is still calling this a “work in progress,” and with American Truck Simulator’s ‘Project Road Trip’ getting attention too, it looks like the studio is making a broad push into new vehicle types and job systems. If both games get robust new gameplay, it could set a new gold standard for the genre. But as ever, the devil’s in the details: Will there be new companies to manage, route optimizations, or even the infamous “coach toilet dilemma” that every real-life bus driver dreads?

Bottom line: if you’ve spent years tooling around Europe wishing you could swap cargo for passengers, this is the hopeful sign you’ve been waiting for. SCS’s commitment to long-term updates is part of why ETS2 is the truck (and maybe soon coach) sim to beat. Now we just need real info on release timing, pricing, and—most importantly—how deep the simulation will go. Let’s hold SCS to their reputation: no half measures, please.
SCS Software is finally teasing official coaches and buses for Euro Truck Simulator 2, a feature die-hard fans have wanted for years. If they nail the realism and don’t just slap a new model on truck routes, this could be the most exciting ETS2 update in ages. But until we know more, cautious optimism is the way to go—sim fans deserve depth, not just a new coat of paint.
Source: SCS Software via GamesPress
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