If you’ve ever looked at a massive crawler transporter or a towering bucket wheel excavator and thought, "I want to drive that," then was built specifically for you. While the simulation genre is often crowded with trucks and farming equipment, this title from Code Horizon carved out a niche by focusing on the absolute behemoths of the industrial world.
The "simulation" tag is earned here. These machines move slowly. Very slowly. This isn't an arcade game; it’s a game of precision. You have to manage your cockpit controls, monitor your surroundings via cameras, and ensure you don’t cause catastrophic damage to the environment or the machine itself. giant-machines-2017-game
The sense of scale is well-executed. When you’re sitting in the cockpit of a machine that weighs thousands of tons, the world feels appropriately small and fragile around you. More Than Just "Driving" If you’ve ever looked at a massive crawler
Here is why this 2017 title still holds a spot on the hard drives of simulation enthusiasts. The Scale is the Star These machines move slowly
The inclusion of an "Analog Drive" system meant that players with steering wheels or controllers could get a more nuanced feel for the heavy hydraulics, though the mouse-and-keyboard setup remains functional for those without extra gear. The Verdict: Is It Still Worth Playing?