


Other cite bad texture quality (flickering issues and textures which came with OMSI default maps) and improper use of objects or splines, which claimed that doesn’t match some of the sections of the map. On one bus depot, an backdrop is used on the foreground, only to hide buildings from that depot), street lights missing on some zones, making impossible to make some night routes, aswell some narrow streets which for some were impossible to drive without colliding with an AI car, with an object or the pavement, with the collisions enabled. My future add-on purchases will be only the Citybus O 305 G (the articulated version of the O 305) and the Citybus O 405 / O 405 G (of Pedro Vendeira, which marks the evolution of Mercedes-Benz high-floor buses).īy seeing the reviews on Steam (which are mixed), 70% to 80% of the most useful are the ones which doesn’t recommend the Projekt Gladbeck at all, citing quality issues and inconsistencies (zones with a lot of detaileration, other ones poorly detailed, with some streets even without a building. One good payware add-on (which was also freeware: Berlin-Teltow), the Berlin X10, was also not choosen, more due to my not preference of Double-decker buses. Fortunately, I’ve not purchased the add-on, preferring bus-only add-ons (and one with a map): the Citybus O 305 (also for getting other buses which used the script pool, like the O 307 of Perotinus), the Three Generations (which Citaro C2 and C2G buses are similar to the ones of the map Gladbeck) and the Chicago Downtown Add-on (this one more because of the New Flyer D40LF and DE60LF buses). In my OMSI lifetime, I’ve seen great payware add-ons being published (the O 305 citybus, for example, opened the door for high-quality freeware buses, which used the scripts of the O 305) and, also some good and crappy freeware add-ons comming and going to the OMSI world and to the OMSI community.īut I’ve not seen an crappy payware add-on, until an previously freeware map, called Gladbeck, banned by the official forum of the OMSI due to copyright infringements and “stolen objects” turned into a payware map, which costs more than the game itself (the Gladbeck map costs about €34.95 / $34.95, and the OMSI 2 itself costs €31.99 / $31.99).
