Railroader
Steam News 25 June 202510mo ago

June 2025 Development Update

Hello Railroaders! Today we are happy to share our progress on the Maintenance of Way (MoW) update we've been hard at work on. We knew this was going to be a big update, and as we have playtested and iterated on MoW tha…

Update log

Full Railroader update

The complete published notes, normalized for clean reading and source attribution.

Repeated intro

Hello Railroaders!

Extracted changes

0 fixes1 addition17 changes0 removals
  • Maps
  • Balance
changedToday we are happy to share our progress on the Maintenance of Way (MoW) update we've been hard at work on. We knew this was going to be a big update, and as we have playtested and iterated on MoW that has certainly proven true. It's also driven us to revisit some aspects of Railroader's milestone progression and the map itself.
changedWe think it's important to note that none of this has happened in a vacuum, so to speak. Since we announced that we were working on MoW we've received tons of great ideas and feedback. Thank you! This is one of those features that makes it challenging to balance wide open vision with what we can make real, and will mesh with the rest of the game.
addedIn our last update on MoW we shared that you'll use ballast, ties, and rail to maintain your tracks. One thing we didn't share at that time was our thinking on how the core MoW mechanic of the work train would be a very cool way to do construction milestones. Instead of spotting a few batches of cars next to the missing track, what if you had to purchase and supply loads to the work train as it made its way down the line? This is the direction we're taking for the MoW update, and we're very excited about the richness and challenge it adds to Railroader.
changedThe Price of Ballast: A Historical Reference PointWhat loads are needed to rebuild the Ela bridge? Or build from Bryson Bridge to Alarka Junction? We dug into our sources, textbooks and historical records including the Tennessee Valley Authority and Southern Railway's own historical numbers for rebuilding the line to come up with the "at the time" resources. Based on those numbers we estimated the loads to build the 13 miles of railroad between Bryson and Fontana Lake and came up with:
changedThe Price of Ballast: A Historical Reference Point22 cars of rails
changedThe Price of Ballast: A Historical Reference Point139 cars of ties

Today we are happy to share our progress on the Maintenance of Way (MoW) update we've been hard at work on. We knew this was going to be a big update, and as we have playtested and iterated on MoW that has certainly proven true. It's also driven us to revisit some aspects of Railroader's milestone progression and the map itself.

We think it's important to note that none of this has happened in a vacuum, so to speak. Since we announced that we were working on MoW we've received tons of great ideas and feedback. Thank you! This is one of those features that makes it challenging to balance wide open vision with what we can make real, and will mesh with the rest of the game.

In our last update on MoW we shared that you'll use ballast, ties, and rail to maintain your tracks. One thing we didn't share at that time was our thinking on how the core MoW mechanic of the work train would be a very cool way to do construction milestones. Instead of spotting a few batches of cars next to the missing track, what if you had to purchase and supply loads to the work train as it made its way down the line? This is the direction we're taking for the MoW update, and we're very excited about the richness and challenge it adds to Railroader.

The Price of Ballast: A Historical Reference Point

What loads are needed to rebuild the Ela bridge? Or build from Bryson Bridge to Alarka Junction? We dug into our sources, textbooks and historical records including the Tennessee Valley Authority and Southern Railway's own historical numbers for rebuilding the line to come up with the "at the time" resources. Based on those numbers we estimated the loads to build the 13 miles of railroad between Bryson and Fontana Lake and came up with:

  • 22 cars of rails

  • 139 cars of ties

  • 1,429 cars of ballast

  • Total load cost: $335,039

Well. As exciting as it was to imagine moving 1,590 cars to and from the interchange, we decided that for the vast majority of players this was not anywhere in the realm of realistic or practical. By scaling those numbers we've arrived at car counts and costs that are both practical and substantial:

  • 10 cars of rails

  • 20 cars of ties

  • 200 cars of ballast

  • Total load cost: $15,080

(Note that for simplicity I've omitted costs and loads to construct the bridges in these example milestones.)

Keep in mind that we are still very much in the development/playtesting phase and these numbers are almost guaranteed to change before we release the MoW update, but we wanted to give you an idea of what we're thinking about. What do you think? Let us know in the comments.

Rethinking Milestones and The Map

Rethinking the milestones in terms of construction materials has also caused us to rethink the boundaries of those milestones, and even the reward for accomplishing a milestone, which is generally satisfaction of reaching a goal and access to more customers. We understand that for many players the western end of the map, with its lower customer density and heavy grades, may be too much to tackle. To address this we are making the following adjustments:

  • Changing the Bryson Bridge to Fontana milestone to run only as far as Alarka Junction, and adding a second milestone from Alarka Junction (past the spur to Robinson Gap) to Almond. The Nantahala milestone will begin after Almond.

  • Dramatically reworking Nantahala Talc & Limestone at

Source

Steam News / 25 June 2025

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