TrainzOnline:About

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TODO: The text below mainly discusses the Trainz Simulator product, which is inappropriate subject matter for this page.

TrainzOnline:About
 

Introduction

TRAINZ is a series of 'virtual reality' rail simulator computer games with over a million users world wide developed by Australian game developer N3V Games Pty Ltd (previously Auran Developments Pty Ltd.) The game system is extensible and has a large active user base creating new content world wide. Unlike a typical dwelling, want-a-be model railroaders don't need modeling skills, a whole basement and ages of time to satisfy the need to do railroading. The new user starts with a dozen or so debugged ready-to-run railroads and can begin to learn how to make their own by modifying those and following well written .pdf file manuals. There are even versions that run on tablets computers running the iOS operating system from Apple, and on tablets running on the Android system. Many Trainz releases can be bought online and downloaded, or by CDROM/DVD in most game software retailers.

Contents

Since 2001, the game has been updated and released in several versions—almost annually with major releases about every second year. These run under various operating systems such as MAC OS X, and various Microsoft Windows versions, each release featuring new extended content and evolved features bundled (as a starting point) with each wikibooks:Trainz/Versions Of Trainz|retail version release]].

Multilingual language support has been built into Trainz since Trainz 1.3, increased in the best selling TRS2004 and expanded in the hugely popular TRS2006 release in 2005. Trainz Simulator 2012 is the latest Microsoft Windows installment in the franchise which was released in April of 2011. Since its release, the game has attracted a large fan base due to its compatibility with third party user-created content (Train Cars, Buildings, Locomotives, Track types, trees, bridges, etc.) for which access and support in a huge database called the Download Station' is provided for by the developers.

File:Trainz 1-3d Surveyor-Trackmark-Consists were added at such in Driver.jpg
This is a view of a route published as a stock scenario by Auran in Trainz 1.0, and later used (with better graphics) in TRS2004 as the tutorial route for learning to operate a steam locomotive. The image shows a red mark on the tracks, known as a track mark, where the user had to manually place a train to use a map. The Trainz Track laying tool panel is open, it looks very similar in today's later versions. Also in view are two tracking cameras, one reddish in the near view at left and one distant appearing a faint green. These can be placed to see 'choice' external views of a passing train from the outside.
File:Trainz 1-3c Surveyor view, note Visual artifacts and graininess (Antd).jpg
This slightly different angle has been annotated to show early graphics deficiencies: a) Flashes, visible in the distance; b) Rough Transition rendering as water meets land'; c) Ground-Sky vacillation, as modeling software 'dithers' unable to settle on what it should be showing.

The Trainz Railway Simulator or Trainz Railroad Simulator is a franchise of successive ever improving products by Australian Auran/N3V Games conceived of and begun in the late 1990s and was and is primarily based on Model Railroading Club needs. It is not strictly speaking a video game, but has a vast 'play' capability, with over 3,500 free routes<ref>May 27th, 2013, Content Manager listed 3,600+ routes on the Download Station suitable for TRS2009; the actual count is higher for this does not count route assets to builds above TS2009-SP4, excluding any routes at the tech levels of TS2010 and TS2012.</ref> available to copies of registered software, on what is called the 'Trainz Download Station(DLS).

A concise overview

The software is centered about a powerful database and database manager—called ContentManager.exe  which doubles as a FTP download manager over a secure internet link, a three dimensional GUI world building tool (Surveyor) that allows Virtual World and Model Railroad constructing and a GUI run-time Driver module which lets people enter their own virtual world and, what else, operate realistically modeled trains. You don't have to be a bona-fide railroad enthusiast to enjoy Trainz, but it helps you to get started, for Trainz is likely to be the most complicated and 'sophisticated' software suite most average people will ever possess or touch! Fortunately, while the early learning curve is daunting, the software is user friendly once the user taps into the excellent .pdf file manuals.

As an aid to beginners, or to route exploration and debugging, Trainz has an easier Driver mode called DCC, which is a mouse-drag mode adjusting a 'virtual dial' much as many users are familiar with operating home Model Rail Road sets, basic or fancy. The realistic CAB mode models real world trains' physics requiring much more planning ahead since controls have delays and friction forces are realistic steel wheels on steel rails—one does not stop nor start a heavy train on a dime!—and both physics models do incorporate the extra mass of train-car loads into the mix of behavioral effects, the effects are just far milder when driving a heavy coal train loaded to the gills when under DCC mode.

The software system is extensible and flexible, for example, one can have a Trainz world where one only drives boats and ships, never seeing a railway! Similarly, many Trainzers have tricked out automobiles to cruise their layouts' road ways, and there is an odd airplane or two flying the skies at the whim of the layout designers.

The Trainz world is one in which each version's 'content', including that you make especially for yourself, is upgradable to the next improved version. At the same time the creative efforts of legions of Trainzers who have collaboratively built up a freeware library of over 260,000<ref>May 27th, 2013, Content Manager listed 267,000 non-local assets on the Download Station suitable for TRS2009; the actual count is higher for this does not count assets to builds above 3.3</ref> 'assets' available to become 'content' on a route (layout). In Trainz-speak, an asset is a library item available on the DLS and/or locally where it is prepped and filed away by Content Manager and is available to the GUI modules—if and when used and placed in a 'container', it becomes 'content'. The biggest container in that hierarchy is a route, which in the physical Model Railroad milieu, is called a layout; a term which is used interchangeably in the Trainz milieu, which is frequently spoken of as 'V-scale Model Railroading', for 'Virtual scale'.

File:CM-UndertheHood-00c-Two Errors In a mere 250Mb Download-Or Are There-quesmark!.JPG
TRS2009 ContentManager (CM) screenshot showing a just two hiccups in a download of over 250 Megabytes. The errors were both false-each caused by switching the display mode of CM's displayed sort filter causing a file access dilemma while CM was processing and vetting downloaded data. The TRS2006 Content Manager Plus (CMP) or TC3's slightly more updated version would have likely crashed under the circumstances, showing one sort of ongoing tech improvement version to version.

The product entered development in 1997 and reached Beta testing as Trainz V0.9 in 2000 and was from this start always bundled with the Gmax 3D modeling software. The Beta test version was circulated among model railroad clubs primarily in the United Kingdom, the United States and Australia, who cheerfully leaned into the challenge and created much of the original routes, and content aided with the expertise of Auran developers and so from the start, Trainz has been a vibrant online community, and still is. Like any large community, the Trainz community has sub-communities, which offer members an environment of philosophical togetherness and collaborative co-operation. Most of these sub-groups have their own forums, icons, logos, and names. The user will see notable user groups such as Blue Sky Interactive, Cardiff Workshops, HP-Trainz, JointedRail, Narrowgauge, Razorback-Railway, Trainzproroutes, Trainzland, Zatovisualworks—some of which offer professional grade Trainz Payware, as well as become N3V/Auran partners (providing high quality new routes in various new releases) and newer organizations like Yesterdayz Trainz sprinkling the main Auran web forum and all over the place in content selection, the routes in Trainz versions, and on the DLS. They stand apart from the greater Trainz community only in the way an organ is distinguishable from the body, they are a major important part of the culture and the fruits of their collaborations are the heart and soul of the best Trainz has to offer.

The downside

Like many major software systems, the Trainz programmers release Service packs (SP) which combine bug fixes and release of new features. In the corporate world, a company has at least an IT consultant, or an in-house staff familiar with this standard method of software upgrading. In the Trainz world, one occupied by private users, you will have to act as your own IT department—fortunately the community will give you quite a bit of help. It is almost a certainty, that anything you experience will be an experience many have had and solved before you.

Service Packs in Trainz are free, as is not the case in equally powerful commercial database products. The scenario editor tool in Trainz SP3 modified the game so much, many Trainzers consider it a second major release. The tool was continued in the line's second major release, the 2003 A.D. release of the classic and best selling TRS2004—which many Trainzers have forgotten had it's initial share of warts in the form of bugs and even the occasional Big Blue Screen of Death (BBSoD). A similar bug-hunting experience (without the BBSoDs!) has been ongoing with the new technologies in TS2012, which includes Speedtree tech, but whereas TRS2004 was made an icon and put on a pedestal after the release of SP4 and TRS2006 had similar eminence (Some hardcore devotees are just now switching up to newer versions in mid-2013 from both!), the newest Trainz simulator is still experiencing minor teething troubles, having bitten into the promising world of multi-core microprocessors, 64 bit processing and advanced graphics cards. It is however, unlikely a new user will be as critical or even notice many of the nits the Trainz tried-and-true power users are cataloging. The developers record for dealing with such is however, excellent—and there is every reason to believe they will overcome the sometimes raucous and demanding voices of complaint voice on the forums at Auran.com.

More upside

Trainz 2004 was radically different from Trainz 1.0-1.3 in many important ways, yet enabled importing content (route maps, world making things like buildings, trees, miniature people, and even animals) from versions Trainz 1.0-Trainz 1.3 (sometimes named TRS2001 or Trainz 2001), as is the case with all Trainz content—it can be imported, albeit at times needs some minor tweaks in the process. Trainz 2006 made similar strides, was perhaps more popular and in introducing the unified ContentManager with it's combined upload/download and database management functions, stabilized Trainz into modes and forms of operations readily recognizable in today's versions. Versions since have improved upon that, and TS2009 made great strides in adding features to surveyor, justly earning the moniker, World Builder Edition.

Consequently, the list of available assets with which to unleash one's individual creativity just continues to grow, and a version tracking and control system can match the needs of a die hard TRS2004 or TRS2006 devotee, as well as support an upgraded version suitable for TRS2009, TRS2010, or TRS2012. Taking new assets and even some routes backwards when built for a newer release is also possible—but more difficult, for instead of aiding you in the effort, ContentManager will be acting in opposition to the effort, by and large. The Trainz 2006's .pdf file 'manual' was so good, it's still published as the definitive Trainz operating manual with the versions since, it's Content Creation Manual is a similar stalwart reference on how to make things in and for Trainz, but is now augmented by one of Auran/N3V Games three main groups of servers providing an online Wiki Trainz Wiki reference site, accessible even from within Trainz operating environments. The Trainz Wiki reference pages, when different from the .pdf manuals are the definitive word on the latest changes to asset definition and operation. When an asset has upgrading problems to a new version, the Trainz Wiki specifications of the technology generally show the way the advancing technology requires a new definition, or has superceded an old method. The technology changes listed therein are directly updated on the Trainz Wiki by the programmers.

As a consequence, Trainz is the oldest, most successful and flexible (series of ever improving) computer simulators for running a realistically modeled 3D virtual reality world and interacting with the Train locomotives and interactive railway industries which are the focus of the series. There have been several simulators with better graphics engines, among them industry software giant Microsoft, but none with the staying power and huge library of user created content free to all registered users.

Releases and Versions

Each new retail release (a year coded name like TRS2012) has usually included some new railways (usually in a partnership arrangement from one of the major user groups noted above) and also re-validated world building assets (including older 'standard' routes bundled on many releases) for the new retail 'base version'. Such world building assets are the focus of many a talented content creator whose knowledge of graphics and painstaking dedication produce marvelous three dimensional self-defining graphical objects such as train cars (rolling stock), locomotives, interactive industries, scenery industries and other buildings, road and water transport vehicles (with visible traffic), landscaping scenery, animals, airports, track-side objects or other landscape assets such as telephone poles, road signs, billboards, new interactive docks, cranes, railroad crossings at and for the new tech level in the new release/version. All assets in Trainz, including even routes have a unique identity code and a technology level tracking number called the "Trainz-build" number. Trainz corporate website enables access to over 267,000<ref name="assets-sampled">Trainz ContentManager.exe accessing and listing the DLS contents listed over 267,000 assets and 3,500 routes 27 May, 2013 for Trainz 2009-SP4 aka. Trainz version/Trainz-build tag 3.3; so the actual count is higher, as this list would not include assets uploaded to Trainz-build tags above 3.3, but does include all assets down to build tags 0, indicating a Trainz 1.0 before Trainz-build tags were implemented (TRS2006-SP1). Whether the list double or triple counts assets with upgraded kuid2 version tracking, is at the moment, unknown.}} </ref> such possible extensions (assets) to one's virtual worlds, for free!

As each Trainz release is upgraded by a Service pack the 'Trainz Version' incrementally increases in lock step, and assets created for that technology capability are tagged with a Trainz-build tag number matching the Version number exactly. The one refers to installed run time software technology—which also has an more exacting 'code build number' which uniquely identifies the version and increments with any specific patches the user has added, so is a bit more refined, while the Trainz-build tag refers to an assets base technology level like the base version number. The three correspond in lockstep, with the code build number being more focused and refined, so used in bug reports. Typically these upgrades extend incrementally the graphics delivery and abilities of the Trainz virtual worlds, and many service packs also extend capabilities by adding user requested feature improvements. In a very real sense, today's and tomorrow's Trainz versions are an invention of the vibrant on-line community joint effort and devotion.

Both the N3V 'Trainz Wiki and the web board actively request features from users and offer a programmer-developer two way communications channel to and from the user base. This like the decision to focus the products on a less demanding video technology level is a philosophical and deliberate policy on the developers and company's part—Trainz is not and likely never will be a software system aimed at the newest or latest-greatest computer technologies and video cards—in stark contrast to the interactive demanding technologies needed for high end video gaming—but one written for and carefully targeting the average computer system capabilities retailed several years ago, thus spreading their market to the common folk who can't throw money away upgrading to the newest and expensive fads in computing. Put another way, once you put a version of Trainz on a computer that runs it comfortably, you have a lot of reason to keep the machine without replacing it for a long, long time. With a capable machine, the next version or two may also run fine, but you will likely benefit after half-a-decade by upgrading the old video card to one with more on card processing and memory. The new Speedtree and Level of detail (an adjustment decreasing graphics rendering needs at longer Length of Distances viewed) technologies are deliberately designed to both increase computational speed (they off load their drawing tasks off of your main Computer microprocessor (CPU) onto the optimized-for-graphics co-processors on today's video cards) and diminish computational loading (A distant object needs fewer fine details to be calculated and drawn), whether it be for Trainz or Hollywood. This graphics mode is the wave of the future now bearing fruit in computer gaming and simulations feeding today's generation of high definition monitors or televisions. (A high definition Television can be a monitor this day and age, and frequently are.)

An operational overview

In the simulators run time environments (called 'Driver') the simulator is in 'play mode' and so might be confused with a mere computer game. Driver is the module which runs the virtual world and lets you travel through a 3D manifestation, a scenario or problem is known as a 'Session'', most being designed to play until finished in one sitting, 'a session' of playing railroad engineer. However in a full Trainz install (Some game like driving only versions have been published, including those for newer cell phone operating systems) you can become the world creator and alter and adjust the game play mode and the world content to add or subtract from the driving experience.

World building itself is fun, and perhaps the most addictive feature of the game, aside from creating your own 3D content, which again is engrossingly rewarding. For example, for a first foray into the world building module Surveyor, a new user might choose to extend and expand on one of the bundled Driver (game play) sessions to change the end conditions and scoring such that a long freight haul to a schedule scenario is morphed into one which also requires one to break down the train's consist (various connected cars) and deliver them to certain local industries outside the railyard which was the original session's destination (the stopping point of the original session). The next trial in surveyor might find one adding an industry off a new siding, adding consists and locomotives, and exploring the logic of the command sequences which define how a session operates. The important thing to realize is every new thing can be tackled in your own good time on a schedule of your choosing, with no pressure from your boss, and everything is sensible and your knowledge of things which at first look seem arcane and mysterious will become logical and commonplace in short order. The only requirement is a willingness to break things (experiment)—even failures have a reward, as now you know one thing which will not work!

This is possible as Trainz won't allow the new user to over write the stock content of ten-to-twelve railroads that are the part of each release in the series, and each of those will have one to six game playing scenarios, or 'Driver sessions' in Trainz-speak, that are also protected—so Trainz automatically clones such content giving the new user a private, single user, modified version which is equally playable. Similarly, when instead the new user attempts to change the Trainz Route (virtual world, or layout in Model Railroading), the system will then clone the original to make a private copy and the Session, so one can explore the benefits of such a world change immediately.

Trainz is thus extensible immediately and each release bundles a little bit of Railroad Enthusiast Created and debugged content in the release. It differs from the competing products in it's facility to create or alter a layout at will, and for-pay expansions are just as, if not more so available for Trainz, whereas such competing products require for-pay purchases to add in.

Content expansion has then one important difference and that is most content is end user created by people that take pride in their work and most of the time keep it updated, and it's mostly free, so when a Trainzer sets the system aside for their own good reasons (job, family), dies or, becomes infirm or, is otherwise unable or unwilling to contribute further, we in the greater community continue his or her legacy in such cases. The majority of this content is Freeware (though sometimes the licensing is restricted*) after all and hosted on a central server where it is easy to find; if there are a few things which are a bit dated, we all got what we paid for and expecting perfection when paying nothing is foolish—more so, for we also all get that good start that a little update fix will make current, so griping about it is just plain silly if something is out of date and a tech level or two behind. It was free. This book will also guide you in such little fix-ups.

* Technically all content is copyrighted, but shared under a copy forward licensing arrangement similar to the GNU copy forward license or such similar licenses as content archived on the Wikimedia Foundation's Wikimedia Commons, or for that fact, this Wikibook. The common license in Trainz is the asset must attribute the original creator when changed, and may not be used for commercial gain. This is very much true of all these similar licensing modes.

How to proceed

The intent of this book is to guide you in various aspects of the many simulator learning curves. This is from the outside, a complicated package, but one which is easy to master step by step. Content creation is a foray into 3D modeling and another stage of growth and learning only tackled once one becomes familiar with the basic system, the web sites, and has some fun driving and world building. This part of the book is a general reference, and can be checked with and against advice received on the web boards, for many tips herein originate there and are vetted for relevancy and clarity.

The basic requirements are a computer with a separate relatively up-to-date graphics card and drivers but because much of the content is end user created and some is more computer friendly than others no matter how fast your computer is a content creator who doesn't think in terms of performance can sometime seem to bring it to its knees. When a software asset (a route and session, in this case) runs roughly and sometimes staggers, this is a likely cause.

A major source of information is the Auran Trainz Discussion Forums and in particular new users should read [this thread on the Auran forums ]. At this point the book becomes like a railyard, with several diverging tracks. There is the general reference branch, which also details information by retail release names (Trainz 1.x, TRS2004 and UTC, TRS2006 and the Trainz Classics, TRS2009, TRS2010 and TRS2012).

On content creation

If you are new to creating content then please pay careful attention to new assets being made available in the community, and bear in mind that many users see nice features on the greater body of other users' work such as Level of Detail (LoD), working animated couplings (more applicable to UK items), shadows, visible loads, visible bulk loads, animated loading and unloading, changeable loco / wagon numbers and specular lighting and will expect to see them on yours. Yes many older assets on the Download Station do not have these features, but these are increasingly unused. Even simple scenery buildings these days will frequently have a smoking chimney and night mode lighting, may be available in several versions (Base house, house + garage, house+garage+breezeway/patio between, and perhaps various colors or siding looks etcetera). By connecting yourself up with one or more content focused open-to-new-member user groups like Trainzproroutes or Yesterdayz Trainz Content Creation Academy you are not only going to find people that will happily give you tips and instruction, but masters who can help you learn the many steps of creating 3D assets to professional standards levels—people that will then urge you on when ready to upload something to the bigger stage of the Download Station.

Enjoy. If a new user, please proceed down the New User Track for additional guidance.

References

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