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The 24 Most Niche Simulation PC Games We Could Find

 & Max Eddy Former Lead Security Analyst
 & Gabriel Zamora Senior Writer, Software
Our Experts
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65 EXPERTS
43 YEARS
41,500+ REVIEWS
(Credit: René Ramos; SCS Software, Lucas Pope, The Irregular Corporation, Red Dot Games, Steel Crate)

Editors' Note, December 17, 2025: With this update, we removed Farming Simulator 19, Fishkeeper, Football Manager 2021, and Trainz Railroad Simulator 2019 from our lineup of niche simulation PC games. The remaining picks have been vetted for currency and availability.

Many games prioritize cinematic narratives or intense action, but the simulation genre offers a unique and more varied experience, ranging from hyper-realistic flight controls to comically mundane and unusual offerings. On one hand, complex simulations and PC gaming pair like cheese and wine. The Sim and Tycoon series, for example, let you manage intricate systems or organizations on a macro level. On the other hand, the genre has also consistently embraced the bizarre, as demonstrated by PowerWash Simulator and SimAnt.

Ready to play some oddball titles? Windows PC is the primary platform for niche simulation games, but the Linux-powered Steam Deck is a viable alternative thanks to its Proton compatibility layer. With that in mind, we present our favorite extremely niche simulator games.


Airplane Mode

Billed as "the most realistic flight simulation ever created," Airplane Mode promises all the thrills of a long-haul flight. You can look out the window, work on a crossword puzzle, read the book you brought, and even watch movies on the screen in front of you. The only unrealistic part is that the seat directly next to you isn't taken.

Of course, no game is complete without some kind of adversarial threat. The developer promises randomized events each time you play. You'll have to endure the agony of bad Wi-Fi, the mild inconvenience of delays, and the annoyance/empathy of listening to a crying baby.

Bee Simulator

The Bee Simulator trailer opens with a powerful promise: Become a bee. What more could you ask for? Bees are great! They pollinate, they make honey, they live in cool hives. In Bee Simulator, you'll do all that and help your extended bee family grow. Plus, you get to look at a cute, fuzzy, lil' insect for the whole game.

You can become a bee on most major platforms. Players can purchase this swarming adventure on the Nintendo Switch, PC (Epic and Steam), PS4, and Xbox One.

The Bus

The name says it all. In The Bus, you take to the streets of Berlin aboard a hulking omnibus, retrieving and depositing passengers around the city. In addition to driving, you also manage routes and timetables for a bit of a Football Manager vibe. Except instead of soccer games, you're driving a bus through AI-traffic amidst changing weather and seasons.

The game boasts of its incredible bus detail, down to the ticket taking, but the developers seem just as proud of the virtual Berlin they've created. The game's trailer features lovingly rendered shots of famous buildings and landmarks, bathed in digital magic-hour sun. If you're tired of being quarantined, perhaps you should get on The Bus. 

This game is currently available for purchase via Steam Early Access. Or, if you're more historically minded, explore SimBus' classic models.

Car Mechanic Simulator 2021

Cars are impressive machines that have come to define labor, commuting, and status. This becomes all the more apparent when your car breaks down, crippling the mobility we often take for granted. So show your car a little love and respect by giving Car Mechanic Simulator 2021 a try.

Start your garage business, invest in junk cars to fix and flip, expand your facilities, and marvel at the realistic detail under the hood of more than 70 cars and 4,000 unique parts. If you ever feel like tinkering with your car, but don’t want to bust up your real one, this is the game for you.

Cities: Skylines

SimCity is the landmark franchise for the city-building genre, but the blunders of its 2013 SimCity release opened the door for new challengers to the throne. Cities: Skylines will probably never unseat SimCity's legacy, but it's a fantastic addition to the genre that has become the de facto city-builder in the years since its release.

The idea is to grow your small town to a buzzing metropolis, monitoring population, happiness, and income. Plan and build roads and neighborhoods with residences, and live the hectic life of a god-like city planner. Recent expansions have added more mass transit options, the world of industry, and harbors.

The basics for setting up a functional town aren't difficult to learn, but there are so many different buildings and amenities to master that making a truly efficient city takes time. And that's before you take aesthetics into account—building a visually stunning city is half the fun. Balancing optimal functionality with visual appeal is an absorbing challenge, as you'll want to make those sweeping highways that move traffic more effectively look grand, too. The blank canvas of a new file is oddly invigorating, a chance to plan for mistakes that caused problems in your last city.

If you stick with Cities: Skylines and learn to be flexible with the tools, you'll eventually look back on your first attempts as archaic, and the only limit for your next design is your imagination. Just don't forget to connect the plumbing.

Dog Sled Saga

The frozen wastes near Mount St. Somewhere call to your simulacrum and your digital dog sled team in Dog Sled Saga. The game's goal is to manage your team of mushers and dogs, learning their unique working styles and growing to become a legendary dog sledder.

Most importantly, you can pet your simulated dogs. This is really the most important part, and makes it the most significant piece of dog-sled related media since Cuba Gooding Jr.'s classic Snow Dogs.

Dwarf Fortress

Dwarf Fortress (or, rather, "Slaves to Armok: God of Blood Chapter II: Dwarf Fortress") is a labor of love spanning nearly two decades. You take command of a generational colony of fantasy miners living in a mountain. Construct new mines, dig new tunnels, and keep your dwarves whistling while they work. And then wait for it to all go wrong.

Dwarf Fortress is known for its incredible complexity and difficulty, where a single mistake can lead to tragedy. Tunneling too greedily and too deep can, for example, accidentally flood your dwarves' home when you hit some groundwater. 

Famously unfinished and without an actual winning condition, each game is guaranteed to eventually collapse into spectacular failure. Fortunately, the game seems to embrace its own glorious absurdity. With a release date of "time is subjective" and features like "Now with graphics!" the game's Steam page seems to know exactly what it's doing. Especially intriguing are two new game modes that may give a little more shape to this endless experience.

Euro Truck Simulator 2

Ever wanted to just kick back, relax, and hit the (virtual) road? Euro Truck Simulator 2 offers exactly that, charging you with driving cargo from point A to point B across the European continent. You can customize your vehicle, and even run a business for which you can purchase garages, trucks, and hire drivers. You'll earn less for picking up scratches and other damage along the way, so try not to get distracted by the beautiful scenery.

Despite those features and goals, it's really all about the driving, a vehicle sim in the truest sense. Euro Truck Simulator 2 is not a game for high-speed thrill seekers—you're meant to follow the rules of the road in your huge cargo vehicle—but something to zone out to at the end of a long day. It may sound dull on paper, but its peaceful vibe and the ability to put on some tunes as you cruise the highway make for a surprisingly enjoyable experience.

Finally, a game that delivers on the promise of the masterful Desert Bus.

House Flipper

The Great Recession certainly took a toll on all of us, and this House Flipper simulator appears to be a byproduct of that cultural experience. Start by purchasing a dilapidated house (in what appears to be an otherwise nice neighborhood), and then turn it into a dream home for big bucks.

Like the PC building simulator we explore elsewhere, House Flipper seems to put a lot of its stock into agonizing realism. You'll have to rewire those sockets, change the fuses, and clean the windows before you can hand over the keys to a buyer. But the game also features a dollhouse-like interior design mode. If you've ever played The Sims just so you could build a cool house, you'll find this game appealing.

Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes

Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes depicts that tense, Hollywood moment where the hero must defuse a bomb based on instructions provided over radio. Several players have different sets of (lengthy) instructions for bomb defusal that may, or may not, relate to the bomb the defuser sees. The defuser needs to not only defuse the bomb, but describe it adequately so the rest of the players can tell him what to do.

Keep Talking reminds us of Spaceteam, in that it requires participants to communicate in real time outside the game. Also like Spaceteam, the crux of the game is as much about reflexes as it is about communication; each person has some piece of information another one needs. It's very clever, and worth your time if you're interested in adding some hilarious stress to your next dinner party.

Model Builder

Building models is a massively popular hobby, but it is time consuming and potentially expensive. Enter Model Builder. This sim gives you the hands-on experience of snipping, gluing, painting, and decorating realistic models, but without the model to display when you’re done. Sure, you could argue that owning the figure is the whole point of building one, but finished models are space hogs.

With Model Builder, you get an immersive assembly and painting experience, with plenty of planes, ships, vehicles, and figures to craft and add to your digital collection. If you don’t have the space or the income to maintain a collection in real life, give Model Builder a try.

NIMBY Rails

NIMBY Rails (for PC)

Spend any amount of time in a major city and eventually you will find yourself staring at the train map and know, deep in your heart, that you could have done a better job designing this system. Friend, NIMBY Rails is for you.

In this game, which is currently available on Steam through its Early Access program, you redraw the rail system for any locale you desire. Reimagine Detroit as a utopia of public transit. Connect nations with high speed rail. Finally make a way to get from Astoria to Williamsburg without going all the way through Manhattan (the G train does not count, do not @ us). NIMBY rails will also put your creation to the test with virtual riders and simulated peaks and valleys of demand throughout the day. 

Offworld Trading Company

Dubbed an "economic RTS" by its creators, Offworld Trading Company challenges you to build a Martian colony whose survival depends on its economic success. Buy and sell your way to victory, while a real-time commodities market ticks away in the background. This setting makes the forces of unchecked capitalism as deadly as the cold vacuum of space.

Offworld might be one of the more fantastical simulations in our list. As such, it would be easy to discount. But consider that you must play a StarCraft-style RTS while also watching the price of 13 different resources constantly fluctuate on your screen. If that doesn't pass the wonkiness threshold for our brand of niche game, we don't know what does.

Papers, Please

The glorious republic of Arstotzka is having a bit of an immigration problem, and it's up to you, a border agent, to quickly and accurately assess the validity of each visa request in the darkly comedic Papers, Please.

As the political situation changes, so do the requirements at the border crossing. You must quickly peruse all the documents and decide whether to let each person pass. All the while, you must bring in enough money to feed and house your family, and choose between counterrevolutionary behavior and starvation.

This game will not only challenge your abilities as a player, but also force you to make terrible choices between your personal morals and playing by the game rules. Have fun!

PC Building Simulator

In PC Building Simulator you build simulated PCs. Hence the name. Choose your components, pick your case, and power on your dream battle station. You want lights? You got it. You want liquid cooling and brand tie-ins from major names in the industry? It's all here. You want simulated 3D benchmark tests and a repair mode where you run virtual antivirus? That's here, but why you're asking about it makes us a little worried.

There's more than just high-end product-placement wish fulfillment in PC Building Simulator, though. The developer claims that part of the game is to learn about the components and how to actually put them together. It's edu-tainment!

What we find so intriguing about this particular title is its bewildering reflection-of-a-reflection-of-a-reflection sensibility. The idea of using a gaming PC to build another gaming PC and then boot up that gaming PC to use a simulation of an operating system approaches Philip K. Dick-level absurdity.

Pizza Slice

Pizza Simulator

The forthcoming Pizza Simulator (a demo is available now on Steam) begins with a straightforward and familiar formula: you're running a virtual restaurant, fulfilling orders for your virtual customers. We all remember how this works from the numerous restaurant games that graced the early days of mobile gaming. Pizza Simulator, to its credit, plans to go beyond the standard one-dollar cheese slice, however.

The trailer pauses briefly on the pleasures of customizing furniture and crafting the perfect made-to-order pie when your peace is disturbed by an act of apparent sabotage. What's an aspiring pizza tycoon to do? Chuck a stink bomb into the kitchen of a rival, obviously. And somewhere between these acts of small business management and vengeance, you're apparently going to deliver pizzas, as well. Of course, this title's success will likely depend on whether or not it includes Chicago deep dish, the superior pizza format.

PowerWash Simulator

3.5 Good

If the thought of blasting grime away with a high-powered hose gets you hot and bothered, you may have a cleaning fetish. More importantly, you may want to try your hand at PowerWash Simulator.

Start your budding business as a powerwasher in an ash-riddled, volcanic mountain town, and aim your sights at whatever filthy project the locals need cleaned. Manage your soap stores and adjust your water nozzle to suit the intensity of the job. Use your profits to invest in new washers, attachments, and accessories. Become the master of cleanliness. Don’t let your slovenly real-life habits deter you: cleaning items in PowerWash Simulator is darn-near therapeutic.

PowerWash Simulator review

RimWorld

RimWorld is a sci-fi, colony-building sim where you must make a hostile planet home for your colonists. Managing a host of eccentric pioneers in an environment trying to kill them may not be everyone’s idea of a good time, but the combination of base building, survival, and emergent narrative elements can prove highly addicting and rewarding. From colonists losing their minds to native creatures destroying all of your hard work, RimWorld throws a stream of obstacles at you to manage on the fly. Your colonists are not professionals, either, merely stranded and often ill-equipped for what lies ahead.

Deal with relationships, trade, combat, weather, pirates, and more as you create your own (often tragic) story among the stars.

Satisfactory

Flatten nature and bend the land to your will with the power of industry. Satisfactory is a first-person, open-world game that focuses on building and expanding factories. It's a never-ending quest for automation and efficiency.

Satisfactory features a massive world rife with resources to plunder. The varied biomes include grasslands, rocky and dune deserts, and forests. Each biome has varying amounts of resources, terrain nuance, and biomass to consider as you build. Embrace your creative side and develop storage structures, smelters, conveyors, supply lines, and whatever else you can think of to exploit the alien planet. The factory never stops growing.

Speaking Simulator

Like some kind of horrific mashup of QWOP and Octodad, Speaking Simulator challenges you to behave normally. That should be easy, because you definitely are not a robot trying to blend in with humanity. You definitely do not have a mechanical head that's barely capable of producing speech. Everything is fine!

If you enjoy the challenge of hitting just the right button with your tongue, you can take Speaking Simulator mobile on the Nintendo Switch.

Stardew Valley

Following in the tradition of Harvest Moon, Stardew Valley is less a farming simulation and more a soap opera that unfolds as a series of vignettes between your character and the townsfolk of the Valley. The main goals of the game are getting to know your neighbors, and learning their stories. Oh, and getting them to fall in love with you.

Of course, your farm will need tending, too. Plant, water, and harvest, and then change over your crops as the seasons change. Raise chickens, cows, dinosaurs, and ducks. Build pickling barrels and beer barrels to turn raw goods into artisanal products, and try to do as much as you can before the long winter freezes the ground. It's surprisingly fun, and even more charming.

Workers and Resources

If other city-planning games feel too samey and dull, spice things up by nationalizing all private industries. Workers and Resources is a Steam Early Access title that lets you take control of a planned economy. Sure, you can construct buildings and roads and all the standard city sim stuff, but in Workers and Resources the developers say you can manage everything from agriculture to wiring to traffic. You want Brutalist architecture? Buddy, we got Brutalist architecture.

Its promotional materials have Dwarf Fortress levels of ambition. "Most complex and complicated city builder you've ever seen," crows the game's trailer. "An original theme that would be too risky for any other studio or publisher to develop," it continues. We should note that while these statements may be true, they do not necessarily mean that the game is fun.

Just remember that in Soviet Russia, PC simulates you!

Tech Support: Error Unknown

If you're intrigued by the meta nature of PC Building Simulator, you're sure to be thrilled by Tech Support: Error Unknown. This simulation puts you in the hardest, most dangerous, most high-pressure job in the world: IT technician.

Boot up your computer into the fictional SpectrumOS, and start your work day of triaging emails, completing request tickets, and being the unsung hero of the office. Or just tell people to try turning it off and turning it back on again. There's more to this than just keeping the network running. The developer says you can attempt to take down your employer from the inside, or expose a hacktivist group that has targeted your company. It's an intriguing idea, one that can apparently yield one of 20 possible endings, but we really dig enduring the perils of trying to carry out an email system migration after hours.

Workshop Simulator

If you’ve ever watched ASMR restoration videos online, you know exactly what to expect here. Workshop Simulator turns this concept into a fully realized game by giving you a selection of projects to repair, and the tools you need to give these antiques a second life.

Manipulate and inspect vintage objects and tools, such as a rusted pepper grinder, oil lamp, or rocking horse. Take them apart bit by bit, clean them up, give them a fresh coat of paint, and put them all back together. There is a solid selection of tools to employ, like the handy screwdriver, wrench, angle grinder, and airbrush. Every vintage item you restore has a sentimental value, so you learn more about the protagonist’s family history with each antique you repair. If you’re itching to tinker with tools and don’t have a workshop of your own, try your hand at Workshop Simulator.

About Our Experts

Max Eddy

Max Eddy

Former Lead Security Analyst

My Experience

Since my start in 2008, I've covered a wide variety of topics from space missions to fax service reviews. At PCMag, much of my work focused on security and privacy services, as well as a video game or two. I also wrote the occasional security columns, focused on making information security practical for normal people. I helped organize the Ziff Davis Creators Guild union and served as its Unit Chair.

My Areas of Expertise

  • Technology, security, and privacy
  • Security and privacy software, including VPNs
  • Hardware multi-factor authentication keys
  • Open-source software and hardware
  • Election security and disinformation
  • Interpreting infosec research for a wider audience
  • Amateur Myst historian

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Gabriel Zamora

Gabriel Zamora

Senior Writer, Software

In 2014, I began my career at PCMag as a freelancer. That blossomed into a full-time position in 2021, and I now review email marketing apps, mobile operating systems, web hosting services, streaming music platforms, and video games as a senior writer. I'm a graduate of Hunter College, a hard-core gamer, and an Apple enthusiast.

The Technology I Use

I play many video games in my spare time, especially on my gaming rig, which is equipped with an AMD Ryzen 5 3600 processor, Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080 GPU, and 16GB of RAM. The Nintendo Switch 2 also sees a lot of action thanks to its backward compatibility, but I'll also occasionally hop on the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X. 

I'm currently using an iPhone 15 Pro Max, coupled with the Apple AirPods Max that my brother gifted me for Christmas, to listen to music or podcasts on the go. That said, I always carry my iPad Mini with me. The tablet line has served as my faithful drawing canvas for years, and is the one piece of tech I upgrade whenever I can. Paired with an inexpensive Wacom Bamboo Duo stylus, I have a compact, reliable, and convenient doodling set to keep me busy during long commutes across the Big Apple.

Cooking is my dearest passion next to gaming, and I embrace any tech that makes modern cookery a little easier. I discovered the Paprika Recipe Manager during my stint as a chef at Google HQ and fell in love with its simple yet feature-packed toolset. It makes saving and editing online recipes a cinch, and having easy access to them on my phone is a tremendous convenience.

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