Automation.the.car.company.tycoon.game...: Arquivo:

: Players must design production lines. Large-scale "Mass Production" reduces unit costs but requires massive upfront capital, simulating the economies of scale inherent in the 20th-century auto industry. 4. The "BeamNG.drive" Integration

This paper analyzes Automation: The Car Company Tycoon Game as a high-fidelity simulation of the automotive industry. It focuses on the game's two primary pillars: the , which utilizes real-world engineering constraints, and the Grand Campaign , which simulates global market dynamics, consumer demographics, and industrial logistics from 1946 into the near future. 1. Introduction: The Simulation Philosophy Arquivo: Automation.The.Car.Company.Tycoon.Game...

The "Tycoon" aspect of the game transforms engineering choices into business outcomes. : Players must design production lines

The depth of the simulation is rooted in its physics-based calculations. The "BeamNG

: Players must manage variables such as thermal efficiency, octane requirements, and material stresses. For instance, choosing forged internals allows for higher RPMs but increases production costs and engineering time.

: The world is divided into regions (e.g., Fruinia, Archana) with distinct socio-economic profiles. A luxury GT car that sells well in a wealthy region will fail in a developing market due to high "Service Costs" and "Reliability" demands.

Unlike arcade-style racing games, Automation focuses on the "why" and "how" of automotive design. The "Arquivo" (archive) of the game represents a massive database of mechanical components—from pushrod inline-fours to modern twin-turbo V12s. The core objective is to balance engineering excellence with commercial viability, forcing players to navigate the same trade-offs faced by historical manufacturers like Ford, Toyota, or Ferrari. 2. Engineering Realism: The Engine and Chassis Designer