Euro Truck Simulator 2
It’s also not only a driving sim—it’s a business loop. The game explicitly pushes you to run a company that grows as you deliver, then scale up: buy garages, hire drivers, build a fleet, and keep the money flowing. If you want to “play it like a chill trucking career,” you can. If you want to become a spreadsheet emperor with 12 garages and a small army of employees, ETS2 politely enables that too.
Customization is another long-term hook. There’s proper tuning (performance and cosmetic), plus lots of add-ons—lights, bars, horns, beacons, exhaust effects—so you can build anything from “professional hauler” to “disco lighthouse on wheels.”
Where the game has quietly aged into a platform is its ecosystem. Officially, it supports **Steam Workshop (mods) and even includes a level editor in its feature set, which explains why it still feels alive after all these years. On top of that, it has built-in Convoy co-op so you can drive together online, and chat while you do it. If you want bigger multiplayer vibes, the community route is TruckersMP, which hooks into your Steam account and adds a shared-world experience outside the official mode.
Finally, ETS2’s longevity is not an accident: it’s still actively updated by SCS Software (recent open beta patches are a regular thing), and the DLC library is enormous—Steam lists 100+ DLC items, including map expansions and themed cargo packs. Even PC Gamer noted the game hit a new concurrent player peak long after launch, which says a lot about how evergreen this “driving trucks across Europe” concept has become.


