Below are user reviews of Railroad Tycoon II and on the right are links to professionally written reviews.
The summary of review scores shows the distribution of scores given by the professional reviewers for Railroad Tycoon II.
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User Reviews (1 - 11 of 29)
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Brother, can you spare a dime?
2
Rating: 2,
Useful: 1 / 5
Date: January 05, 2005
Author: Amazon User
I never could get this game chugging on more than one cylinder. The manual is irrevelant and no outside game helps are published (I've looked for more than a year). Play the stockmarket ??? Forget about it ... If you are not into the esoterica of steam trains or stupid country music, the computer steals the fun and always has you dead to rights. Historical trade and industrial patterns are treated very lightly indeed. I like to able to play the game, but I couldn't make it do anything.
You Will Never Be Board From It
5
Rating: 5,
Useful: 2 / 2
Date: September 30, 2004
Author: Amazon User
It is really amazing game I am playing wih it since 4 years , and still i enjoy it . Being a specialist of tycoon games this one is a very big hit .
With some amendments to the cargo types it will be perfect
Promising...
4
Rating: 4,
Useful: 3 / 3
Date: June 12, 2003
Author: Amazon User
"Railroad Tycoon II" is the 1998 sequel to the 1990 classic "Sid Meier's Railroad Tycoon". Even though Sid's name has jumped ship, this is a solid sequel to a great game. The premise is simple enough: Build a railroad, buy some trains, ship stuff from where it is to where it's needed. Get rich.
From humble concepts mighty games are grown, and enriching this basic idea are things like: train quality, which forces you to choose between [cost], fast, good on slopes, or reliable; keeping demand high by supplying only small amounts versus the cost of connecting other places where demand is high; short routes with small payloads and fast turnarounds versus long routes with big payloads; buying and selling stocks to take advantage of economic trends; buying the businesses whose materials you're transporting; defending against train robbers or hiring shady characters and exploiting legal loopholes; and so on.
Basically, this premise works, and supplies hours of good, addictive fun. There's a lot of replay value as well, since you can take a different approach to each game. The graphics are (still, even in 2003) pleasant and communicative, and the sound is mostly good. The scenarios are pretty challenging without (for the most part) being crushingly hard, and the three levels of victories encourages replay as you try to "go for the gold".
The are a number of hitches, unfortunately. The manual and tutorial are really inadequate--which tends to sting given that most of the fan-supplied data on the Web is gone. The supply-and-demand process is actually somewhat opaque. (I did figure it out, but it took me a while and some research on the 'net.) Your board of directors is very gullible, not able to look ahead even a month (this makes them easy to manipulate). The stock market stuff makes it easy to lose with a thriving railroad and doesn't add much to the game that I've experienced.
Further, trains really only go from point A to point B. That is, say you have cattle yard (B) that needs grain and two grain farms (A1 and A2) that supply grain, you can't set up a train to pick up grain at A1, travel to A2 to pick up more grain, and then travel to B to drop it off. When the train stops, it's completely unloaded. This is never spelled out anywhere, and certain ways of setting up a train's route suggest otherwise. But in the above situation, your train will actually unload grain at a grain farm (for no money) rather than haul it another ten miles to the cattle yard, where it's actually needed.
The scale of the game is such that each train moves about 1/50th-1/100th of its actual speed. In other words, a trip that should take a week takes a year. This is probably a necessary abstraction(train-model fans will want to keep in mind that this game has NOTHING to do with their hobby) but it has the effect of exaggerating every mistake or mishap. Jesse James didn't just rob a single train, he robbed your entire route for the year.
All of this detracts a bit, but it's a testament to the strength of the concept and execution that this would still be a five-star game, even with these issues. The killer--the thing that made me subtract a star--is the track-laying interface. It's really easy to lay track you didn't mean to. There's no undo. It actually costs you to remove it. The way the UI figures out the smoothest route is dubious, and there's really no decent handling for the fact that finding the smoothest track is best done at the closest zoom while finding the shortest route is best done at the furthest zoom.
Coupled with some bugs that make stations seem disconnected, you can end up in a situation where you lose a game because the track-laying interface was not up to the task. And that's the only =real= sour lemon in this package. Again, though, even with this, there's still a lot of fun.
It'll definitely whet your apetite for "Railroad Tycoon 3".
Like It So Far
4
Rating: 4,
Useful: 3 / 3
Date: July 30, 2002
Author: Amazon User
I just got the game a few days ago included in a value pack. I am currently playing the campaigns and so far I am enjoying the game. Even my husband is playing it.
Pros: Sim type game
Different type of trains and several campaigns which I love
Is challenging for an average game player don't know about hardcore players
Con's: The game tutorial was okay, but wish I could find a way to start back at the beginning of it. When my husband wanted to play I had to tell him how to do it instead of him doing the tutorial because it wouldn't start back at the beginning
Other than that I don't know of any other cons since I have just started playing and haven't started the scenerios.
You do get tired of laying down tracks all the time, and have to zoom in and out.
So far I am really enjoying it
Saying the truth!!
1
Rating: 1,
Useful: 1 / 11
Date: April 02, 2002
Author: Amazon User
I have never heard about this game, but one day, I saw it on a shelf, in a computer store. Iv'e read about it and it sounded really fun. It sounded really fun to build a train company, and to build train stations but when i really tried it, it was so hard, and it wasn't fun. It's hard to understand the investments thing and you are loosing all of your money in 5 minutes. I dont understand why is everybody saying that this game is good, cause this game is bad. VERY BAD! VERY, VERY BAD! Who can prove that i'm wrong? a couple of days after i bought i started to use cheats in the game because it is too hard. This game should get 0 starts, it should get nothing. So... Dont buy it because you'll just be waisting your money!!
Railroad Tycoon II
3
Rating: 3,
Useful: 2 / 2
Date: September 01, 2001
Author: Amazon User
Railroad Tycoon II is a real time strategy game by Poptop software with complex interactions, interesting graphics and lots of thinking. The gameplay reminds me of Chris Sawyer's Transport Tycoon, In which you play a tycoon who control the trains, buses, planes and ships in the tycoon world. In RRT2 you play as the railroad baron and control the train transportation, Buy and sell stocks, set the train routes, lay the railway tracks, stations and take over companies. There are lots of real life trains and cities. The gameplay is quite good, It takes a while to learn to play and be good at it. RRT2's graphics are very good, The towns are very beautifully desinged, There are lots of beautiful terrain and real looking buildings, The world looks real, with rivers, forests, snow and hilly mountains. RRT2's screnario's are also very well desinged and a lot fun to play, It also comes with a screnario editor for you to create your own screnario's. Railroad Tycoon II has got a clumsy interface, It is very hard to lay the tracks with the mouse. There are other annoying factors like, You don't get enough money, It's hard to manage things when you have a lot of trains and stations, You need to pay a lot of attention at the stock market to make money ect. Railroad Tycoon II is a very good game but quite hard to play. If you like this game get Transport Tycoon, It is more intresting, lot more fun and quite easy compared to this.
Highly addictive at first
3
Rating: 3,
Useful: 0 / 3
Date: July 05, 2001
Author: Amazon User
This game is fun the first time you play it, except laying railroads and building the same towns over and over again gets boring. I immediately started searching for cheats, which give the game a little more boost, but it was collecting dust in about a month. Dont waist your money. If you think you would like this game buy Roller Coaster Tycoon instead.
A Railfan Must
5
Rating: 5,
Useful: 0 / 0
Date: June 18, 2001
Author: Amazon User
I have the original, and when this came out I wasted no time in purchasing it. The enhancements lifted many of the restrictions of the original. The only disappointment is that Tycoon II does not allow one to build tunnels. The graphics are fantastic, the animations are super, the backgrounds sounds are nice, and the challenge all absorbing. The ability to change settings based on your machines power is an excellent feature. When I bought a new machine stepped up the graphic definition and animation. The animations are cool! There are so many options, scenarios, and maps, surely someone who enjoys railroading will find several of these to keep them busy for hours on end. But its not just a "railroad" game. It challenges your business sense. Its about personal investing and wise business expansion. You have to make business decisions every step of the way. You can go bankrupt or be the tycoon and anything in between. Summary, fun, challenging, stimulating, and entertaining. Now I am goin' for the 'GOLD' That is RR TYCOON II Gold edition!
Excellent Game
5
Rating: 5,
Useful: 0 / 0
Date: May 06, 2001
Author: Amazon User
Love this game as well as part two never really appreciated trains until I started playing this game. Good history lesson.
Still chugging along
5
Rating: 5,
Useful: 8 / 8
Date: March 06, 2001
Author: Amazon User
Do you still have any 2 year old games on your hard-drive? Probably not. Most gamers delete games that are even a few months old to make way for new ones, or the game's simply sit there on our desktops - pretty little unused icons. This game though - Railroad Tycoon II, is a definite exception to this deleted/unused game rule.
The reasons are numerous - graphics, gameplay, replayability and of course it's strategy element. The game is a lovely mix of complexity (the business model) and simplicity (setting up stations and laying track). It is real time strategy and economic simulator; as a virtual train set it's playful and yet with all stock market options turned on, it's as cuthroat as the world of the historic robber-barons must have been. The red in the game is not from bloody combat but simply your company bleeding to death as these tycoons (your computer adversaries) take you to the economic woodshed, short-selling your stock if they see an opportunity in ruining you in doing so. From all this it's obvious that economic factors are important, but how does this work in gameplay?
Game play takes place in scenarios which are meant to allow us to delve into all aspects of the game. Some objectives may involve accumulating the largest personal worth or hauling the most cargoes or creating the wealthiest company. Still others may be as simple as connecting two cities or doing something else the fastest. Income is earned hauling cargo. There are dozens of cargo types, either as inputs or output from the dozens of industries that are featured. Setting up is simple. Choose from one of 3 station sizes, lay your track and choose your engine. There are dozens of trains available (not all at once - it depends on the historical period) The secret to making substantial income is to lay routes that create a production cycle. For example: two cargoes available are iron and coal; haul these to a steel mill; take the steel output plus orchard crops to a cannery and then haul the resulting food back to your city completing the cycle and earning all along the way.
The route laying and running of trains takes place in a 3D window which can be rotated as required and zoomed in to give you a good view of your railroad at work. The ambient sounds provide background or serve as clues to what's going on. The sceech of your crashing train is suitably disturbing to make you pay attention.
Have fun tycoon, or are you more of the Robber-baron type?
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