![]() ![]() All of the parts exist in the real world and are fully licensed with all their accurate sizings and compatibility perks, with the weird side effect that your main PC also starts with the same background as your desktop in the real world, letting you get immersed into the world in seconds. The game is clearly made by people who really care about how PCs fit together and it’s full of nice little details. No other game will ask you to scrap thermal paste off of a used CPU, or pull a stock cooler from a graphics card so you can fit water-cooling into the whole deal. From here you’ve done your time, and it becomes more about the freeform puzzle experience of improving PCs and using the cast-offs and spare, used, parts to build your own machines. It’s fiddly work and at about the point you decide, an hour or two into the game’s career mode, that you’re sick of it and you never want to turn another screw or plug in another cable, the game lets you buy a tool to do that for you. At first you’ll spend a lot of your time pulling out the tiny screws that hold the side of a case on and dragging apart the various cables between your peripherals and monitor, and then the screws that hold the CPU cooler together and then the tiny clips that hold the power supply into the case. ![]() Your PC building batcave is in the back of the store, however, and there you’ll use a handful of work benches to build a PC customising empire, starting by fixing broken PCs and slapping a few stickers of an emoji love heart onto someone’s case, and culminating in full internal rebuilds and also building and flogging your own machines at a profit from the inside of the shop. You start off in a ratty-looking shop that’s not a million miles away from a place in Cornwall I used to buy second-hand video games when I was at university, even down to the shelves that have partially collapsed and the perpetual clearance sale signage promising that everything really, I promise, has to go. Many of these new sim games start out with a whole lot of busy work, and the same is true of PCBS2. READ MORE: The 8 best PC games you need to play in 2022 That’s PC component humour, and not something I would have really understood before spending a few hours in the quiet backroom of PC Building Simulator 2, taking apart machines and components, before putting them back together better than before. You can watch the console release trailer below.PC Building Simulator 2 Free Download Repacklab So if you’re the type of console owner who wants to learn how to build your own custom gaming rig, PC Building Simulator is available now on PlayStation 4, Xbox One and Nintendo Switch. There is also a free build mode, where you can use real life branded, licensed parts to build your own unique and crazy creations. In story mode you take over your own repair shop at first fixing simple machines for customers, but gradually working up to more challenging builds as you master the techincal skills of PC repair. ![]() PC Building Simulator brings you all the joy of constructing and repairing custom PCs, but without having to blow all of your life savings. You would have thought the audience for this game would be “PC gaming master race” types, who wouldn’t dream of playing on anything that requires a controller but PC Building Simulator defied the odds and is now available on consoles. What started off as a free tech demo became an unexpected hit, with PC Building Simulator selling over 750,000 copies when it was released as a full title by The Irregular Corporation. The game where you can run your own PC repair shop and build the computer gaming rig of your dreams has (quite unexpectedly) come to PS4, Xbox One and Nintendo Switch, and is available to play now
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