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A-Train

A-Train (A列車で行こう, Ē Ressha de Ikō, lit. Take the A-Train) is a series of business simulation video games developed and published by Japanese game developer Artdink in Japan. The first game in the series was published in 1985.[citation needed] The first release in the United States was Take the A-Train II, published in 1988 by the Seika Corporation under the title Railroad Empire. However, the most well known U.S. release is Take the A-Train III, published in 1992 by Maxis as simply A-Train. There is also the spin-off title C.E.O..[citation needed]

A-Train
American cover art of Take the A-Train III, localized as A-Train
Developer(s)Artdink
Publisher(s)
Platform(s)FM-7, PC-88, PC-98, Sharp X1, Sharp MZ, Famicom, MSX2, X68000, Amiga, FM Towns, Mac, Mega Drive, Nintendo DS, 3DS, Switch, PC Engine, PlayStation, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable, Super Famicom, Wii, Windows, Xbox 360
Release1985
Genre(s)Business simulation
Mode(s)Single-player
Release timeline
1985A-Train
1986
1987
1988A-Train II
1989
1990A-Train III
1991
1992
1993A-Train IV
1994
1995
1996A-Train 5
1997
1998
1999A-Train Z
2000A-Train 6
2001A-Train 2001
2002
2003A-Train The 21st Century
2004
2005A-Train 7
2006A-Train EZ
A-Train HX
2007
2008A-Train 8
2009A-Train DS
2010A-Train 9
2011
2012
2013
2014A-Train 3D
2015
2016A-Train PC Classic
2017A-Train Express
2018
2019
2020
2021A-Train All Aboard! Tourism

A-Train edit

The first iteration of the A-Train series was released in December 1985 for the FM-7, NEC PC-8801, NEC PC-9801, X1 Turbo, MZ-2500, Famicom, and MSX2. A Microsoft Windows port followed in April 2000.[citation needed]

A-Train II edit

The second iteration of the A-Train series was released in July 1988 for the NEC PC-9801 and X68000. In the US, it was released under the name Railroad Empire.[1]

A-Train III edit

 
The "New Town" scenario in A-Train 1.0 for Macintosh

Take the A-Train III (known internationally as A-Train) is the third game in the A-Train series. It was originally developed and published by Japanese game developer Artdink for Japan, and was later published by Maxis for the United States. It was originally released in December 1990 for the NEC PC-9801, FM Towns Marty, Sharp X68000, and PC Engine (TurboGrafx-16).[2] The US version was released in October 1992 on DOS and Amiga.[3] Later, the Japanese version was re-released in March 2000 for Windows 95 and 98. Artdink ported the A-Train III along with the editor to Windows 95, and published both titles as a package as the 3rd ARTDINK BEST CHOICE title in Japan.[citation needed]

The game puts players in command of a railway company. There are no rival companies; the player controls the only one in the city and the game is resultingly fairly open-ended. A-Train III is the first game in the series to make use of near-isometric dimetric projection to present the city, similar to Maxis's later SimCity 2000.[4] There are two types of transport that the player's company can take: passengers or building materials. The former is more likely to be profitable, but building materials allow the city to grow. Wherever the building materials are delivered, they can be taken and used to construct buildings for the city. These start with houses, but eventually, as an area grows, roads, and shops and other buildings are built. These can provide extra revenue for a passenger service, but also allowing the city to develop and grow can be seen as a goal in itself. As well as the buildings built by the computer, in response to the materials being present, the player can construct their own buildings, such as ski resorts and hotels, and make profits from them if the conditions are right, and if these areas are populated enough.[citation needed]

A.III. Map Construction, known internationally as A-Train Construction Set, is an editor that can change existing saved games, or to build landscapes from scratch. It comes with 6 sample maps. Maxis also published A-Train Construction Set with A-Train as a single package in Europe, without the Ocean Software label.[citation needed]

Computer Gaming World's reviewer stated in 1992 that while he enjoyed the financial and management aspects of A-Train, "many people will miss out on a fine program because of a steeply graded learning curve".[12] The game was reviewed in 1992 in Dragon #187 by Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk Lesser in "The Role of Computers" column. The reviewers gave the game 4 out of 5 stars.[5] In 1993 the game received a Codie award from the Software Publishers Association for Best Strategy Program.[11] A-Train's isometric, tile-based graphics and animated elements inspired the visual style Maxis went on to adopt for Simcity 2000 in 1993.[4]

In 1994, PC Gamer UK named A-Train III the 46th best computer game of all time. The editors wrote, "Fascinating, absorbing and now quite cheap, A-Train is worth a place in any games collection — and don't be put off by the subject matter. It's brilliant fun."[13]

MD A-Train edit

A Ressha de Ikou MD (A列車で行こうMD, "MD A-Train") is a simulation game involving the construction of a railroad in order to boost the city's mass transit system.[citation needed] The game was released to an exclusively Japanese market; with no release ever being attempted for the North American or European markets.

The player must use the resources at hand to build a railroad connecting the two ends of a map in each scenario. A train can be controlled throughout the day (05:00-17:00) while building new tracks and stations. Nighttime activities (17:00-05:00) involve changing train schedules to better suit the needs of the player's growing mass transportation hub. New developments will spring up around the tracks and stations. This permits the player to increase the amount of money that can earn; resulting in the increased ability to build railroad tracks and stations for the growing city. Five scenarios offer a tutorial mode for first-time players, an extremely hard scenario for veterans, and three more scenarios for players in between the two extremes in difficulty levels. Players can play using speeds that range from slow to normal to fast.[citation needed]

A-Train IV edit

Released in December 1993 for the NEC PC-9801, FM Towns Marty, Windows 3.1 and Windows 95. It was later re-released on March 17, 2000, for Windows 95 and 98 under the title A-Train 4 15th Anniversary, and again on March 26, 2004, under the name A-Train 4 XP, this time including support for Windows 2000 and XP. Related versions include the Japan-only console launch title release AIV: Evolution in December 1994 for the PS1 and AIV: Evolution Global (released under the title A-Train in North America), also for the PS1, and re-released in January 2007 for the PSP and PS3 and AIV Network$ (known as C.E.O. in North America) in 1995 for MS-DOS and Windows 3.1.[citation needed] Also released in North America was the "A Train Evolution Pack", which included the PlayStation version of AIV: Evolution Global, a PlayStation Mouse, an A Train mousepad, and a PlayStation memory card.[14]

On release, Famitsu PS scored the Japanese PlayStation version of AIV: Evolution a 27 out of 40.[18] Five months later, Famitsu magazine's Reader Cross Review gave it a 9 out of 10,[16] and the following week Famitsu scored it a 31 out of 40.[17][21] The four reviewers of Electronic Gaming Monthly were divided about the PlayStation version of AIV: Evolution Global; Andrew Baran and Mark Lefebvre described it as an addictive and pleasantly time-consuming simulation, while Mike Desmond and Sushi-X felt it to be dull compared to most simulation games, especially other Maxis titles. They scored it 28 out of 40 (average 7 out of 10).[15] Like Desmond and Sushi-X, GamePro felt the game "just doesn't roll with the same FunFactor of other sim games."[22] Next Generation said it was "a quality management title. Unlikely to set the world aflame, however."[14]

A-Train 5 edit

Released in December 1996 in Japan for Windows 95, this was the first A-Train game to use 3D graphics with a PowerVR graphics accelerator. It was re-released in December 1997, this time including support for the DirectX and Direct3D APIs for the Windows release, and at the same time saw its debut on the PS1. The PS1 version was re-released in April 2007 for the PSP and PS3.[citation needed]

A-Train Z edit

Released in May 1999 in Japan for the PS1, this was a re imagining of the first game's setting and objectives, using the 3D engine of A5. A reworked version with an anime aesthetic was released on PSP in June 2006.

A-Train 6 edit

Released in March 2000 in Japan for the PlayStation 2 as a launch title. The game sold over 1 million units in Japan.[23] The game was later published in Europe during 2004. A-Train 6 features improved graphics over A-Train 5, as well as the ability to play the game entirely in the 3D view across six different regions, each with a task for the player to meet before progressing.

The game also includes a train viewer, and the ability to replay completed levels with trains that have already been unlocked. The player starts each level with ¥10,000,000,000, and will fail the level if their funding goes into the red.

There are 38 different trains available for the player to use in four categories. Commuters have high passenger capacities, suburban trains have generally slightly lower capacities but are faster, express trains have the lowest passenger capacities but are often the fastest, and freight trains, which haul cargo from industries which can be delivered into commercial and residential areas to boost growth.

A-Train 2001 edit

Released in May 2001 in Japan for the PS2, A-Train 2001 is an improvement over A-Train 6.[citation needed] The game and its dependencies can be installed on the system's hard disk drive. Also, for the first time, people were featured in the game.

A-Train The 21st Century edit

Released on June 19, 2003, in Japan for Windows, this is essentially a rebadged PC version of A-Train 2001.

A-Train i edit

Released on the DoCoMo 504i/505i/506i/900 mobile phones as a service planning game and distributed by Hudson Soft. Players had to pay a monthly fee to access the game. The game is now no longer available as of March 2012.[citation needed]

A-Train 7 edit

Marketed as the 20th anniversary title for the A-Train series, it revives the "urban development" gameplay that had been missing since A-Train 5. It was released in Japan on June 26, 2005, for Windows 2000, XP and Vista. Several expansion packs were released for the game.[citation needed]

A-Train EZ edit

Released by the mobile phone company au by KDDI on the BREW platform in January 2006 and distributed by Hudson Soft, A-Train EZ is similar to A-Train i in that it is also a service planning game.[citation needed]

A-Train HX edit

A-Train HX (A列車で行こうHX, A Ressha de Ikou HX) is a railroad simulation for the Xbox 360. It was released on December 21, 2006, in Japan, supporting high definition graphics (720p resolution) and Xbox Live support for uploading and downloading maps and leaderboards. It is also the first title published by Artdink under the A-Train name for the Japanese market. It was also released in Europe.

The gameplay is similar to A-Train 7, but it has a full 3D view that was previously used in A-Train The 21st Century. However, it comes with map editor as a standard feature. Custom maps can be shared through Xbox Live. Additional Xbox Live features includes leaderboards which contain "Total Capital", "Population" and "Time to 1 Trillion Yen" categories for each map. The Xbox Live features can be used with an Xbox Live Silver account.

Artdink offered over 150 types of trains for sale in Xbox Live Marketplace, based on real-life Japanese trains. The game itself comes with the following trains designed by Artdink: AR3 (Commuter), AR4 (Express), AR5 (LimitedExpress), AR7 (LimitedExpress), ARX (LimitedExpress), U-Shape (Subway), DC4 (Cargo), EC6 (CargoExpress), 186Exp (SuperExpress), Linear (SuperExpress). Before the release of Taiwan version, publisher TTIME Technology held a paper train model contest for winning the game.[24]

Eurogamer reported that they liked the music in A-Train HX, but concluded that "A-Train HX is badly designed, poorly presented, overcomplicated and utterly tedious", giving it a score of just 2/10.[25] Official Xbox 360 Magazine gave it a slightly better score of 3/10. However, they still called it "The most confusing train wreck of a game ever".[27]

A-Train 8 edit

Released on March 21, 2008, in Japan for Windows, the game was also released in Europe.[29] The game was released on Steam worldwide on September 18, 2013.[30]

A-Train DS edit

A-Train DS was released on April 23, 2009, in Japan for the Nintendo DS for 5500 yen. The game featuring touch screen controls and became the first handheld title in the series to have the 3D train view.[31]

A-Train 9 edit

A-Train 9 was released on February 11, 2010, in Japan, and on March 15, 2012, worldwide by UIG Entertainment under the names The Train Giant in English and Der Bahn Gigant in German. It is compatible with Windows XP, Vista, 7 and 10, and is also compatible with the said 64-bit versions. Two Japan-only building kits were released, the first on October 8, 2010, and the second on December 23, 2010. The Japan version also includes a 3D patch costing ¥1050 that can be played using 3D glasses, and the German version includes an unofficial patch that adds 200 trains to the game on top of the existing 11 trains. This also includes a digital manual featuring how-to-play instructions on urban growth, development and financial management, which are the carried-over core game components.

A-Train 9 includes buses and trucks, grouped by distances they travel and the work they manage (e.g. intercity, local, heavy goods, etc.), power plants, Japanese castles and more authentic-looking Japanese buildings.

On December 7, 2012, A-Train 9 Version 2.0: Professional Edition was released in Japan, supporting Windows XP, Vista, 7 and 8. It is available in DVD format as well as a software patch which users of the original A-Train 9 can upgrade to. Version 2.0 includes all content from the two expansion packs intended for the original A-Train 9 plus several new buildings and trains, as well as several bug fixes. Three DLCs were released for The Train Giant starting on August 1, 2012, with "Shanghai". "Boston" and the "Elbe Estuary" were to follow but are impossible to find.[citation needed] "The Train Giant" can be purchased on eBay for about $10 – $15. The version with a "3" on the cover contains the 3 DLCs. On June 29, 2014, a second new version, entitled A-Train Version 3.0: Railway Simulator was later released. This version was then released worldwide on October 10, 2014, via Steam, although due to licensing issues fewer real life trains are available from the Japanese version.[citation needed]

On October 21, 2015, A-Train 9 Version 4.0: Japan Rail Simulator was released on Steam, supporting Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8.1 and 10.

On September 6, 2018, A-Train Version 5.0: Final was released in Japan, supporting Windows 7, 8.1 and 10. No English version of the game has been released thus far.

A-Train 3D edit

Originally planned for 2011, A-Train 3D was released in Japan on February 13, 2014, in North America on April 14, 2015, and in Europe on April 16, 2015, as A-Train 3D: City Simulator. It was published by Natsume Inc. for the Nintendo eShop on Nintendo 3DS. Nintendo eShop pre-orders also received the soundtrack.

A-Train PC Classic edit

Based on A-Train 3D, A-Train PC Classic was released in Japanese on Steam on December 14, 2016. On June 8, 2017, the English version was officially released.[32]

A-Train Express edit

A-Train Express, a port of A-Train 9 with PlayStation VR support, was released in Japan for the PlayStation 4 on December 21, 2017.[33] In January 2019, the game received a rating from ESRB signaling publisher Degica Games intent on bringing the game to the United States.[34] It was subsequently released by Limited Run Games on May 22, 2019.[35]

A-Train All Aboard! Tourism edit

A-Train All Aboard! Tourism was released worldwide on March 12, 2021, for Nintendo Switch. Published by Artdink themselves, it was first announced on February 12, 2020, via Artdink's Twitter account as a "Switch version of A-Train", the latest game for Nintendo systems following the 3DS version.[36] Following shortly after the game's announcement. Artdink revealed the new secretary character, designed by Yuji Himukai,[37] best known for character design works for the Etrian Odyssey series, and also work as the character designer for this game.

On October 28, 2020. It was revealed that the game's official Japanese title is A-Train Hajimaru Kankou Keikaku, and it will come out in 2021 in Japan.[38] On January 6, 2021. The game's release date was revealed to be March 12, 2021. And it would support Japanese, English, Traditional / Simplified Chinese, and Korean language.[39]

On January 14, 2021. The game's official English website was opened. The game's official English title was revealed as A-Train All Aboard! Tourism.[40] The game was also revealed to be a simultaneous worldwide release, with both physical and digital releases available in Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, and Taiwan, and digital releases everywhere else on launch.

References edit

  1. ^ "Railroad Empire (1988)".
  2. ^ "FM Towns ROM Archive". A-Train FM Towns ROM.
  3. ^ "A-Train : Hall of Light - the database of Amiga games".
  4. ^ a b A-Train 2017-02-22 at the Wayback Machine, Personal Computer Museum
  5. ^ a b Lesser, Hartley; Lesser, Patricia & Lesser, Kirk (November 1992). "The Role of Computers" (PDF). Dragon (187): 59–64.
  6. ^ "A.III.(A列車で行こう3) (PCエンジン)の関連情報 | ゲーム・エンタメ最新情報のファミ通.com". Famitsu.com. 2021-05-27. Retrieved 2022-04-18.
  7. ^ GamesMaster, issue 5 (May 1993), page 87, published 19 April 1993
  8. ^ Datormagazin, Vol. 1993, No. 11 (June 1993), pages 52-53
  9. ^ Svenska Hemdatornytt, Vol. 1992, No. 10 (November 1992), page 28
  10. ^ Amiga Magazine[dead link]
  11. ^ a b "Awards - Thy Name Is Controversy". Computer Gaming World. May 1993. p. 146. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  12. ^ Trevena, Stanley (September 1992). "Leavin' On That Noonday Train To Chiba". Computer Gaming World. pp. 38–42. Retrieved 3 July 2014.
  13. ^ Staff (April 1994). "The PC Gamer Top 50 PC Games of All Time". PC Gamer UK. No. 5. pp. 43–56.
  14. ^ a b c "A Train". Next Generation. Imagine Media (4): 86. April 1995.
  15. ^ a b "Review Crew: A-Train". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 80. Ziff Davis. March 1996. p. 30.
  16. ^ a b 読者 クロスレビュー: A.IV. Weekly Famicom Tsūshin. No.333. Pg.34. 5 May 1995.
  17. ^ a b PLAYSTATION CROSS REVIEW: A. IV. EVOLUTION. Weekly Famicom Tsūshin. No.333. Pg.22. 5 May 1995.
  18. ^ a b PlayStation Cross Review: A. IV. EVOLUTION. PlayStation Tsūshin. No.1. Pg.13. 9 December 1994.
  19. ^ Joypad, issue 55 (Summer 1996), page 76
  20. ^ "A-IV Evolution Global (PlayStation) - N.i.n.Retro (New is not Retro) v3+".
  21. ^ おオススメ!! ソフト カタログ!!: A.IV EVOLUTION. Weekly Famicom Tsūshin. No.335. Pg.115. 12–19 May 1995.
  22. ^ "A Train". GamePro. No. 91. IDG. April 1996. p. 88.
  23. ^ . midasinteractive.com. Archived from the original on May 30, 2004. Retrieved November 29, 2023.
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-02-23. Retrieved 2009-02-01.
  25. ^ a b Gibson, Ellie (2008-06-18). "A-Train HX (Xbox 360)". Eurogamer. Archived from the original on 5 September 2012. Retrieved 2008-12-09.
  26. ^ "A列車で行こうHX (Xbox 360)の関連情報 | ゲーム・エンタメ最新情報のファミ通.com". Famitsu.com. 2021-05-27. Retrieved 2022-04-18.
  27. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2008-06-19. Retrieved 2010-07-28.
  28. ^ "A-Train HX Gamerankings Review". GameRankings. Retrieved 2011-12-13.
  29. ^ "A-Train 8 on Steam". store.steampowered.com. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  30. ^ "News - Now Available - A-Train 8". store.steampowered.com. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  31. ^ "A-Train DS". YouTube. 17 April 2009. Archived from the original on 2021-12-12. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  32. ^ "A-Train PC Classic / みんなのA列車で行こうPC :: A-Train PC Classic: English version released". steamcommunity.com. 8 June 2017. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  33. ^ "A-Train Express - PS4". Gamepressure.com. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  34. ^ "ESRB rates A-Train Express for PS4". Gematsu. 13 January 2019. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
  35. ^ Limited Run Games [@LimitedRunGames] (May 15, 2019). "Combine urban planning and transport structuring to create your perfect city in this Japan Rail Simulator for the PSVR" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  36. ^ "A-Train game in development for Switch". Gematsu. 12 February 2020. Retrieved 15 April 2021.
  37. ^ "A-Train for Switch feature new secretary, designed by Yuji Himukai". Gematsu. 18 February 2020. Retrieved 15 April 2021.
  38. ^ "A-Train Hajimaru Kankou Keikaku launches in 2021 in Japan". Gematsu. 28 October 2020. Retrieved 15 April 2021.
  39. ^ "A-Train Hajimaru Kankou Keikaku launches March 12 in Japan, includes English text support". Gematsu. 6 January 2021. Retrieved 15 April 2021.
  40. ^ "A-Train All Abroad! Tourism official English website opened". Gematsu. 14 January 2021. Retrieved 15 April 2021.

External links edit

train, other, uses, disambiguation, a列車で行こう, ressha, ikō, take, series, business, simulation, video, games, developed, published, japanese, game, developer, artdink, japan, first, game, series, published, 1985, citation, needed, first, release, united, states,. For other uses see A Train disambiguation A Train A列車で行こう E Ressha de Ikō lit Take the A Train is a series of business simulation video games developed and published by Japanese game developer Artdink in Japan The first game in the series was published in 1985 citation needed The first release in the United States was Take the A Train II published in 1988 by the Seika Corporation under the title Railroad Empire However the most well known U S release is Take the A Train III published in 1992 by Maxis as simply A Train There is also the spin off title C E O citation needed A TrainAmerican cover art of Take the A Train III localized as A TrainDeveloper s ArtdinkPublisher s JP ArtdinkNA MaxisEU Ocean SoftwarePlatform s FM 7 PC 88 PC 98 Sharp X1 Sharp MZ Famicom MSX2 X68000 Amiga FM Towns Mac Mega Drive Nintendo DS 3DS Switch PC Engine PlayStation PlayStation 2 PlayStation Portable Super Famicom Wii Windows Xbox 360Release1985Genre s Business simulationMode s Single player Contents 1 A Train 2 A Train II 3 A Train III 4 MD A Train 5 A Train IV 6 A Train 5 7 A Train Z 8 A Train 6 9 A Train 2001 10 A Train The 21st Century 11 A Train i 12 A Train 7 13 A Train EZ 14 A Train HX 15 A Train 8 16 A Train DS 17 A Train 9 18 A Train 3D 19 A Train PC Classic 20 A Train Express 21 A Train All Aboard Tourism 22 References 23 External links Release timeline1985A Train198619871988A Train II19891990A Train III199119921993A Train IV199419951996A Train 5199719981999A Train Z2000A Train 62001A Train 200120022003A Train The 21st Century20042005A Train 72006A Train EZA Train HX20072008A Train 82009A Train DS2010A Train 92011201220132014A Train 3D20152016A Train PC Classic2017A Train Express2018201920202021A Train All Aboard TourismA Train editThe first iteration of the A Train series was released in December 1985 for the FM 7 NEC PC 8801 NEC PC 9801 X1 Turbo MZ 2500 Famicom and MSX2 A Microsoft Windows port followed in April 2000 citation needed A Train II editThe second iteration of the A Train series was released in July 1988 for the NEC PC 9801 and X68000 In the US it was released under the name Railroad Empire 1 A Train III editMain article A Train III nbsp The New Town scenario in A Train 1 0 for MacintoshTake the A Train III known internationally as A Train is the third game in the A Train series It was originally developed and published by Japanese game developer Artdink for Japan and was later published by Maxis for the United States It was originally released in December 1990 for the NEC PC 9801 FM Towns Marty Sharp X68000 and PC Engine TurboGrafx 16 2 The US version was released in October 1992 on DOS and Amiga 3 Later the Japanese version was re released in March 2000 for Windows 95 and 98 Artdink ported the A Train III along with the editor to Windows 95 and published both titles as a package as the 3rd ARTDINK BEST CHOICE title in Japan citation needed The game puts players in command of a railway company There are no rival companies the player controls the only one in the city and the game is resultingly fairly open ended A Train III is the first game in the series to make use of near isometric dimetric projection to present the city similar to Maxis s later SimCity 2000 4 There are two types of transport that the player s company can take passengers or building materials The former is more likely to be profitable but building materials allow the city to grow Wherever the building materials are delivered they can be taken and used to construct buildings for the city These start with houses but eventually as an area grows roads and shops and other buildings are built These can provide extra revenue for a passenger service but also allowing the city to develop and grow can be seen as a goal in itself As well as the buildings built by the computer in response to the materials being present the player can construct their own buildings such as ski resorts and hotels and make profits from them if the conditions are right and if these areas are populated enough citation needed A III Map Construction known internationally as A Train Construction Set is an editor that can change existing saved games or to build landscapes from scratch It comes with 6 sample maps Maxis also published A Train Construction Set with A Train as a single package in Europe without the Ocean Software label citation needed Reception A Train III A Train Review scoresPublicationScoreDragonDOS nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 5 FamitsuPC Engine 29 40 6 GamesMasterAmiga 82 7 Datormagazin sv Amiga 92 8 Svenska Hemdatornytt sv DOS 94 9 The OneAmiga 90 10 AwardPublicationAwardCodie awardBest Strategy Program 11 Computer Gaming World s reviewer stated in 1992 that while he enjoyed the financial and management aspects of A Train many people will miss out on a fine program because of a steeply graded learning curve 12 The game was reviewed in 1992 in Dragon 187 by Hartley Patricia and Kirk Lesser in The Role of Computers column The reviewers gave the game 4 out of 5 stars 5 In 1993 the game received a Codie award from the Software Publishers Association for Best Strategy Program 11 A Train s isometric tile based graphics and animated elements inspired the visual style Maxis went on to adopt for Simcity 2000 in 1993 4 In 1994 PC Gamer UK named A Train III the 46th best computer game of all time The editors wrote Fascinating absorbing and now quite cheap A Train is worth a place in any games collection and don t be put off by the subject matter It s brilliant fun 13 MD A Train editA Ressha de Ikou MD A列車で行こうMD MD A Train is a simulation game involving the construction of a railroad in order to boost the city s mass transit system citation needed The game was released to an exclusively Japanese market with no release ever being attempted for the North American or European markets The player must use the resources at hand to build a railroad connecting the two ends of a map in each scenario A train can be controlled throughout the day 05 00 17 00 while building new tracks and stations Nighttime activities 17 00 05 00 involve changing train schedules to better suit the needs of the player s growing mass transportation hub New developments will spring up around the tracks and stations This permits the player to increase the amount of money that can earn resulting in the increased ability to build railroad tracks and stations for the growing city Five scenarios offer a tutorial mode for first time players an extremely hard scenario for veterans and three more scenarios for players in between the two extremes in difficulty levels Players can play using speeds that range from slow to normal to fast citation needed A Train IV editReleased in December 1993 for the NEC PC 9801 FM Towns Marty Windows 3 1 and Windows 95 It was later re released on March 17 2000 for Windows 95 and 98 under the title A Train 4 15th Anniversary and again on March 26 2004 under the name A Train 4 XP this time including support for Windows 2000 and XP Related versions include the Japan only console launch title release AIV Evolution in December 1994 for the PS1 and AIV Evolution Global released under the title A Train in North America also for the PS1 and re released in January 2007 for the PSP and PS3 and AIV Network known as C E O in North America in 1995 for MS DOS and Windows 3 1 citation needed Also released in North America was the A Train Evolution Pack which included the PlayStation version of AIV Evolution Global a PlayStation Mouse an A Train mousepad and a PlayStation memory card 14 Reception PlayStation Review scoresPublicationScoreElectronic Gaming Monthly28 40 PS1 15 Famitsu9 10 PS1 16 31 40 PS1 17 Next Generation nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp PS1 14 Famitsu PS27 40 PS1 18 Joypad fr 84 PS1 19 Video Games magazine de 83 20 On release Famitsu PS scored the Japanese PlayStation version of AIV Evolution a 27 out of 40 18 Five months later Famitsu magazine s Reader Cross Review gave it a 9 out of 10 16 and the following week Famitsu scored it a 31 out of 40 17 21 The four reviewers of Electronic Gaming Monthly were divided about the PlayStation version of AIV Evolution Global Andrew Baran and Mark Lefebvre described it as an addictive and pleasantly time consuming simulation while Mike Desmond and Sushi X felt it to be dull compared to most simulation games especially other Maxis titles They scored it 28 out of 40 average 7 out of 10 15 Like Desmond and Sushi X GamePro felt the game just doesn t roll with the same FunFactor of other sim games 22 Next Generation said it was a quality management title Unlikely to set the world aflame however 14 A Train 5 editReleased in December 1996 in Japan for Windows 95 this was the first A Train game to use 3D graphics with a PowerVR graphics accelerator It was re released in December 1997 this time including support for the DirectX and Direct3D APIs for the Windows release and at the same time saw its debut on the PS1 The PS1 version was re released in April 2007 for the PSP and PS3 citation needed A Train Z editReleased in May 1999 in Japan for the PS1 this was a re imagining of the first game s setting and objectives using the 3D engine of A5 A reworked version with an anime aesthetic was released on PSP in June 2006 A Train 6 editReleased in March 2000 in Japan for the PlayStation 2 as a launch title The game sold over 1 million units in Japan 23 The game was later published in Europe during 2004 A Train 6 features improved graphics over A Train 5 as well as the ability to play the game entirely in the 3D view across six different regions each with a task for the player to meet before progressing The game also includes a train viewer and the ability to replay completed levels with trains that have already been unlocked The player starts each level with 10 000 000 000 and will fail the level if their funding goes into the red There are 38 different trains available for the player to use in four categories Commuters have high passenger capacities suburban trains have generally slightly lower capacities but are faster express trains have the lowest passenger capacities but are often the fastest and freight trains which haul cargo from industries which can be delivered into commercial and residential areas to boost growth A Train 2001 editReleased in May 2001 in Japan for the PS2 A Train 2001 is an improvement over A Train 6 citation needed The game and its dependencies can be installed on the system s hard disk drive Also for the first time people were featured in the game A Train The 21st Century editReleased on June 19 2003 in Japan for Windows this is essentially a rebadged PC version of A Train 2001 A Train i editReleased on the DoCoMo 504i 505i 506i 900 mobile phones as a service planning game and distributed by Hudson Soft Players had to pay a monthly fee to access the game The game is now no longer available as of March 2012 citation needed A Train 7 editMarketed as the 20th anniversary title for the A Train series it revives the urban development gameplay that had been missing since A Train 5 It was released in Japan on June 26 2005 for Windows 2000 XP and Vista Several expansion packs were released for the game citation needed A Train EZ editReleased by the mobile phone company au by KDDI on the BREW platform in January 2006 and distributed by Hudson Soft A Train EZ is similar to A Train i in that it is also a service planning game citation needed A Train HX editA Train HX A列車で行こうHX A Ressha de Ikou HX is a railroad simulation for the Xbox 360 It was released on December 21 2006 in Japan supporting high definition graphics 720p resolution and Xbox Live support for uploading and downloading maps and leaderboards It is also the first title published by Artdink under the A Train name for the Japanese market It was also released in Europe The gameplay is similar to A Train 7 but it has a full 3D view that was previously used in A Train The 21st Century However it comes with map editor as a standard feature Custom maps can be shared through Xbox Live Additional Xbox Live features includes leaderboards which contain Total Capital Population and Time to 1 Trillion Yen categories for each map The Xbox Live features can be used with an Xbox Live Silver account Artdink offered over 150 types of trains for sale in Xbox Live Marketplace based on real life Japanese trains The game itself comes with the following trains designed by Artdink AR3 Commuter AR4 Express AR5 LimitedExpress AR7 LimitedExpress ARX LimitedExpress U Shape Subway DC4 Cargo EC6 CargoExpress 186Exp SuperExpress Linear SuperExpress Before the release of Taiwan version publisher TTIME Technology held a paper train model contest for winning the game 24 Reception Xbox 360 Review scoresPublicationScoreEurogamer2 10 25 Famitsu27 40 26 Official Xbox Magazine UK 3 10 27 Xbox World60 28 Eurogamer reported that they liked the music in A Train HX but concluded that A Train HX is badly designed poorly presented overcomplicated and utterly tedious giving it a score of just 2 10 25 Official Xbox 360 Magazine gave it a slightly better score of 3 10 However they still called it The most confusing train wreck of a game ever 27 A Train 8 editReleased on March 21 2008 in Japan for Windows the game was also released in Europe 29 The game was released on Steam worldwide on September 18 2013 30 A Train DS editA Train DS was released on April 23 2009 in Japan for the Nintendo DS for 5500 yen The game featuring touch screen controls and became the first handheld title in the series to have the 3D train view 31 A Train 9 editA Train 9 was released on February 11 2010 in Japan and on March 15 2012 worldwide by UIG Entertainment under the names The Train Giant in English and Der Bahn Gigant in German It is compatible with Windows XP Vista 7 and 10 and is also compatible with the said 64 bit versions Two Japan only building kits were released the first on October 8 2010 and the second on December 23 2010 The Japan version also includes a 3D patch costing 1050 that can be played using 3D glasses and the German version includes an unofficial patch that adds 200 trains to the game on top of the existing 11 trains This also includes a digital manual featuring how to play instructions on urban growth development and financial management which are the carried over core game components A Train 9 includes buses and trucks grouped by distances they travel and the work they manage e g intercity local heavy goods etc power plants Japanese castles and more authentic looking Japanese buildings On December 7 2012 A Train 9 Version 2 0 Professional Edition was released in Japan supporting Windows XP Vista 7 and 8 It is available in DVD format as well as a software patch which users of the original A Train 9 can upgrade to Version 2 0 includes all content from the two expansion packs intended for the original A Train 9 plus several new buildings and trains as well as several bug fixes Three DLCs were released for The Train Giant starting on August 1 2012 with Shanghai Boston and the Elbe Estuary were to follow but are impossible to find citation needed The Train Giant can be purchased on eBay for about 10 15 The version with a 3 on the cover contains the 3 DLCs On June 29 2014 a second new version entitled A Train Version 3 0 Railway Simulator was later released This version was then released worldwide on October 10 2014 via Steam although due to licensing issues fewer real life trains are available from the Japanese version citation needed On October 21 2015 A Train 9 Version 4 0 Japan Rail Simulator was released on Steam supporting Windows XP Vista 7 8 1 and 10 On September 6 2018 A Train Version 5 0 Final was released in Japan supporting Windows 7 8 1 and 10 No English version of the game has been released thus far A Train 3D editOriginally planned for 2011 A Train 3D was released in Japan on February 13 2014 in North America on April 14 2015 and in Europe on April 16 2015 as A Train 3D City Simulator It was published by Natsume Inc for the Nintendo eShop on Nintendo 3DS Nintendo eShop pre orders also received the soundtrack A Train PC Classic editBased on A Train 3D A Train PC Classic was released in Japanese on Steam on December 14 2016 On June 8 2017 the English version was officially released 32 A Train Express editA Train Express a port of A Train 9 with PlayStation VR support was released in Japan for the PlayStation 4 on December 21 2017 33 In January 2019 the game received a rating from ESRB signaling publisher Degica Games intent on bringing the game to the United States 34 It was subsequently released by Limited Run Games on May 22 2019 35 A Train All Aboard Tourism editA Train All Aboard Tourism was released worldwide on March 12 2021 for Nintendo Switch Published by Artdink themselves it was first announced on February 12 2020 via Artdink s Twitter account as a Switch version of A Train the latest game for Nintendo systems following the 3DS version 36 Following shortly after the game s announcement Artdink revealed the new secretary character designed by Yuji Himukai 37 best known for character design works for the Etrian Odyssey series and also work as the character designer for this game On October 28 2020 It was revealed that the game s official Japanese title is A Train Hajimaru Kankou Keikaku and it will come out in 2021 in Japan 38 On January 6 2021 The game s release date was revealed to be March 12 2021 And it would support Japanese English Traditional Simplified Chinese and Korean language 39 On January 14 2021 The game s official English website was opened The game s official English title was revealed as A Train All Aboard Tourism 40 The game was also revealed to be a simultaneous worldwide release with both physical and digital releases available in Japan South Korea Hong Kong and Taiwan and digital releases everywhere else on launch References edit Railroad Empire 1988 FM Towns ROM Archive A Train FM Towns ROM A Train Hall of Light the database of Amiga games a b A Train Archived 2017 02 22 at the Wayback Machine Personal Computer Museum a b Lesser Hartley Lesser Patricia amp Lesser Kirk November 1992 The Role of Computers PDF Dragon 187 59 64 A III A列車で行こう3 PCエンジン の関連情報 ゲーム エンタメ最新情報のファミ通 com Famitsu com 2021 05 27 Retrieved 2022 04 18 GamesMaster issue 5 May 1993 page 87 published 19 April 1993 Datormagazin Vol 1993 No 11 June 1993 pages 52 53 Svenska Hemdatornytt Vol 1992 No 10 November 1992 page 28 Amiga Magazine dead link a b Awards Thy Name Is Controversy Computer Gaming World May 1993 p 146 Retrieved 7 July 2014 Trevena Stanley September 1992 Leavin On That Noonday Train To Chiba Computer Gaming World pp 38 42 Retrieved 3 July 2014 Staff April 1994 The PC Gamer Top 50 PC Games of All Time PC Gamer UK No 5 pp 43 56 a b c A Train Next Generation Imagine Media 4 86 April 1995 a b Review Crew A Train Electronic Gaming Monthly No 80 Ziff Davis March 1996 p 30 a b 読者 クロスレビュー A IV Weekly Famicom Tsushin No 333 Pg 34 5 May 1995 a b PLAYSTATION CROSS REVIEW A IV EVOLUTION Weekly Famicom Tsushin No 333 Pg 22 5 May 1995 a b PlayStation Cross Review A IV EVOLUTION PlayStation Tsushin No 1 Pg 13 9 December 1994 Joypad issue 55 Summer 1996 page 76 A IV Evolution Global PlayStation N i n Retro New is not Retro v3 おオススメ ソフト カタログ A IV EVOLUTION Weekly Famicom Tsushin No 335 Pg 115 12 19 May 1995 A Train GamePro No 91 IDG April 1996 p 88 A Train 6 midasinteractive com Archived from the original on May 30 2004 Retrieved November 29 2023 鐵道紙模型比賽圓滿落幕 Archived from the original on 2009 02 23 Retrieved 2009 02 01 a b Gibson Ellie 2008 06 18 A Train HX Xbox 360 Eurogamer Archived from the original on 5 September 2012 Retrieved 2008 12 09 A列車で行こうHX Xbox 360 の関連情報 ゲーム エンタメ最新情報のファミ通 com Famitsu com 2021 05 27 Retrieved 2022 04 18 a b A Train HX Information Xbox 360 The Official Magazine Archived from the original on 2008 06 19 Retrieved 2010 07 28 A Train HX Gamerankings Review GameRankings Retrieved 2011 12 13 A Train 8 on Steam store steampowered com Retrieved 19 February 2019 News Now Available A Train 8 store steampowered com Retrieved 19 February 2019 A Train DS YouTube 17 April 2009 Archived from the original on 2021 12 12 Retrieved 19 February 2019 A Train PC Classic みんなのA列車で行こうPC A Train PC Classic English version released steamcommunity com 8 June 2017 Retrieved 19 February 2019 A Train Express PS4 Gamepressure com Retrieved 19 February 2019 ESRB rates A Train Express for PS4 Gematsu 13 January 2019 Retrieved 19 February 2019 Limited Run Games LimitedRunGames May 15 2019 Combine urban planning and transport structuring to create your perfect city in this Japan Rail Simulator for the PSVR Tweet via Twitter A Train game in development for Switch Gematsu 12 February 2020 Retrieved 15 April 2021 A Train for Switch feature new secretary designed by Yuji Himukai Gematsu 18 February 2020 Retrieved 15 April 2021 A Train Hajimaru Kankou Keikaku launches in 2021 in Japan Gematsu 28 October 2020 Retrieved 15 April 2021 A Train Hajimaru Kankou Keikaku launches March 12 in Japan includes English text support Gematsu 6 January 2021 Retrieved 15 April 2021 A Train All Abroad Tourism official English website opened Gematsu 14 January 2021 Retrieved 15 April 2021 External links editA Train at MobyGames A Train IIIat MobyGames A Train PlayStation at MobyGames A Train IV at MobyGames A Train 6 at MobyGames A TrainHX at MobyGames A Train 8 at MobyGames Official website The MS DOS version of A Train III can be played for free in the browser at the Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A Train amp oldid 1187452053, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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