Besides the costs of setting up the server, license fees for station operation landed somewhere between £400 and £500.
Rick, founder of EuroTruckRadioĪs much as it sounds like a hobbyist’s decision, Mini and friends weren’t making the decision lightly-setting up a legitimate internet radio station isn’t like setting up a Tumblr. Before I knew it, we had 400 to 500 listeners. We had techs, people to deal with DJ applications, PR. Before I knew it, we had 400 to 500 listeners." Unfortunately, life got in the way and Rick had to leave after 18 months as he just couldn't find the time for such a big project.
"I got a small team together to help me with the administration side of things.
With the help of the TSR community, they built something that could only happen on the PC: an amateur internet radio station dedicated to an unofficial multiplayer mod in a niche, monotonous simulation game. Later on, Ben Kingdon (Crumbs) came on to provide graphics for the official website and took up the reigns as head of the TruckSimRadio (TSR) virtual trucking company (VTC). Mark Watson (Mini in the online trucking world) joined a community effort to start TruckSimRadio (formerly EuroTruckRadio), an internet radio station made specifically for the trucking sim community (and the terrestrial counterpart to EVE-Radio). Two of Euro Trucking Simulator 2’s most dedicated players know it best. Hauling 30 tons for hours at a time, avoiding accidents and obeying local traffic laws all the while can be lonely, stressful labor.Īnd yet, when you’re playing with others, the open road inspires a calm camaraderie. Why play a game that simulates work, the slow transport of goods across long stretches of pseudo-European highways? Players have to manage everything an actual trucker would: delivery schedules, fuel costs, road tolls, bank loans, and their careers in the cutthroat online trucking industry. For many, Euro Truck Simulator 2 is a stubborn rhetorical question.