Euro Truck Simulator 2 Tips and Tricks 2018
Euro Truck Simulator Tips 2018
Tips and Tricks
After about 50 hours in game I've decided to "share some wisdom." Stuff that I've found out through experimentation to enhance the ETS2 experience. Note that I play with a gamepad, so many of these tips will relate to that.
1: Control tuning.
Set your triggers to acceleration and braking. Don't know why this isn't the default setting. Set your right stick to look.
Increase your up/down look deadzone significantly. This allows you to slap your look stick left and right to scan intersections quickly without accidentally ending up staring at the floor or roof of your cab.
Increase your steering sensitivity. Matter of taste, but the default steering is just too slow for cornering at speed. If you find yourself braking mid turn to wait for your steering to catch up, this is a must.
2: Efficiency.
Cruise control. Use it. I played about 20 hours without it and I can't even guess how many speeding violations I got or how many times out of fear of getting them I travelled under the speed limit costing me time. Or how many times the distraction of having to constantly check my speed caused me to wander over the lines.
Building on that, set your cruise tolerance to zero, turn on auto retarder. You can safely travel up to 9 kph over the posted speed limit without getting cited. So set your cruise to 6 or 7 over the limit and travel at max efficiency without risking tickets.
*Note* It was pointed out to me that the "safe " limit may be 10% over. I've yet to get busted for 56 in a 50 though. It's all at own risk. I'll not pay your speeding tickets. :)
Watch the speed limit signs though, especially in areas where speed cameras are common.
Sleep efficiency. There is no such thing as a partial rest. Every time you rest it's going to burn *9* hours (corrected), even if you're not that tired yet. Start looking for a place to park after the first yawn, no sooner. You'll be fine. Don't bother sleeping between jobs unless the job selection where you're at is♥♥♥♥♥♥ or your rest meter is nearly pegged. Most jobs will allot you enough time to sleep once, especially after you put a few points in long distance. For the really long jobs you'll have time to sleep 2 or 3 times and have time to spare. As of now you don't get a bonus for delivering cargo early, so sleep on the clock.
Some toll plazas have EZPass lanes. You don't have to go to green squares and stop at most plazas. You can slow to 30 kph and breeze on through the EZPass lanes, so watch for those, there will be nothing blocking the close end and a red "30" or whatever above the entrance.
Miss your exit? You won't be penalized for driving the wrong way on the shoulder. If it's too far to the next exit and going to take too long, just carefully pull a u-turn, get on the shoulder, and head back the way you came. Slightly terrifying, but better than wasting hours going out of your way trying to get back on the right path.
Try not to fuel in the UK. It's way more expensive than on the mainland. Fuel before you cross the channel.
Never travel empty, or "bobtail." When you go to job selection, click on the dot on the map for the city you're in. This will list ONLY jobs originating in that city. If there are no high paying jobs, just grab a short distance job to a nearby city and try again there. And remember, $ per km is what you're after, don't just grab the highest total payout.
On the same topic, the payout listed includes any skill bonuses for cargo type, etc. It's like sales tax in the EU. Included. What you see on the price tag is what you pay. What you see includes your bonuses. The math is done for you.
3: Your rig.
The cheapest Iveco truck is♥♥♥♥♥♥ Get a Volvo or one of the other trucks that starts with good baseline HP. Trust me, it's worth saving up the little bit of extra money when you're not crawling up hills, or driving in the cities. Once you get the later engine upgrades it's incredibly satisfying passing the trucks that are struggling up hills.
Necessary upgrades. Engines. Transmissions with retarder for the cruise tip above. Allison 6 speed trannies are garbage, don't waste your time. That's it.
Helpful upgrade 1. Put a light bar on the roof with a couple aux lights, but bear in mind they only work when your high beams are on. You'll have to open the light menu (default F4) and check the blocks for aux lights to enable them.
Helpful upgrade 2. Get side skirts and a bull bar. These will dramatically reduce your damage when you inevitably cut a corner too sharp, get sideswiped in a turning circle, whatever. They pay for themselves quickly.
I don't play the heavy cargo DLC, but in the vanilla game I've found absolutely no need whatsoever for 6 wheel chassis under any circumstances. Having the side skirts and added fuel capacity of the 4 wheel chassis is infinitely more useful. Note: I've read the Mercedes trucks can sport side skirts on the 6 wheel chassis, but then you've also got a longer wheelbase to deal with. So call this personal preference as well, but you definitely don't NEED a 6 wheel chassis for any cargo in the vanilla game.
4: The biz.
Unless you've played before, wherever you select for your home garage, chances are you're going to hate it. Don't bother upgrading it. By the time you can afford your first garage, you're going to want to move. Luxembourg is a great first location. Low fuel prices and lots of close-by cities to trade with.
Once you pay your first truck off, take the loan. Not the little loan. The 400k loan. It has the lowest interest rate. More on that in a minute.
Buy a garage in a good hub city and move there. (There are tutorials on how to do this, but hint, you have to move the truck first, then yourself) Once you've moved, sell your starting garage. Buy your second (and third, if you can afford it) trucks and put them there. Buy the♥♥♥♥♥♥Ivecos for your fleet trucks, at least at first. There is NO benefit to buying better trucks for your hired drivers. None. It makes no difference at all. Tip here, if money is super tight you can change the paintjob to a cheaper color to save about $500 per truck. Strip off optional accessories like the sun shield and front mirror to save even more valuable cash.
Then hire and assign your drivers. Try to start with drivers that have at least one point in long distance and one point in ADR. If none are available, no worries. Grab whoever and assign them to trucks. Manage them and set them to focus on ADR or long distance until they have a point or two in each. Then put a point into each of their skills to maximize their job opportunities. Don't want them returning bobtail either.
Back to the loan. The 12% interest on the 400k loan works out to... Well math, but it's less than 2k per day. If you have 2 drivers they'll make about that right from the get-go, so the loan to start your business basically pays for itself. And within a few days their skills will increase and they'll be making more than that, so you're already profiting. If you wait ("I don't need no BANK to pay my way") you'll be losing out on a ton of potential profit.
Luxembourg (and probably most other hub cities) will support a fully upgraded and filled garage as long as the drivers have a point in each skill so they're not competing with each other for jobs.
After your first garage though, don't bother upgrading them to the max. You can only hire about 150 drivers total and if you have a garage in each city that's about 2 drivers per garage.
5: Assorted tips.
Turn up the rain. It's Europe, not the Sahara. I find 20-25% is a good setting.
If you have a music folder on your computer, you can create a shortcut to it and drop it in the documents\ETS2\Music folder to access your music in game. Then hit R to bring up your radio. You may want to turn down the music volume to where you can still hear the truck though.
Never skip skilled parking your trailer. It gets easy after a while and the experience boost is worth learning to do it.
Anyway that's all I can think of off the top of my head and the road is calling. Good luck and have fun. Hopefully I helped someone. Feel free to post anything I may have missed below.
Tips and Tricks
After about 50 hours in game I've decided to "share some wisdom." Stuff that I've found out through experimentation to enhance the ETS2 experience. Note that I play with a gamepad, so many of these tips will relate to that.
1: Control tuning.
Set your triggers to acceleration and braking. Don't know why this isn't the default setting. Set your right stick to look.
Increase your up/down look deadzone significantly. This allows you to slap your look stick left and right to scan intersections quickly without accidentally ending up staring at the floor or roof of your cab.
Increase your steering sensitivity. Matter of taste, but the default steering is just too slow for cornering at speed. If you find yourself braking mid turn to wait for your steering to catch up, this is a must.
2: Efficiency.
Cruise control. Use it. I played about 20 hours without it and I can't even guess how many speeding violations I got or how many times out of fear of getting them I travelled under the speed limit costing me time. Or how many times the distraction of having to constantly check my speed caused me to wander over the lines.
Building on that, set your cruise tolerance to zero, turn on auto retarder. You can safely travel up to 9 kph over the posted speed limit without getting cited. So set your cruise to 6 or 7 over the limit and travel at max efficiency without risking tickets.
*Note* It was pointed out to me that the "safe " limit may be 10% over. I've yet to get busted for 56 in a 50 though. It's all at own risk. I'll not pay your speeding tickets. :)
Watch the speed limit signs though, especially in areas where speed cameras are common.
Sleep efficiency. There is no such thing as a partial rest. Every time you rest it's going to burn *9* hours (corrected), even if you're not that tired yet. Start looking for a place to park after the first yawn, no sooner. You'll be fine. Don't bother sleeping between jobs unless the job selection where you're at is♥♥♥♥♥♥ or your rest meter is nearly pegged. Most jobs will allot you enough time to sleep once, especially after you put a few points in long distance. For the really long jobs you'll have time to sleep 2 or 3 times and have time to spare. As of now you don't get a bonus for delivering cargo early, so sleep on the clock.
Some toll plazas have EZPass lanes. You don't have to go to green squares and stop at most plazas. You can slow to 30 kph and breeze on through the EZPass lanes, so watch for those, there will be nothing blocking the close end and a red "30" or whatever above the entrance.
Miss your exit? You won't be penalized for driving the wrong way on the shoulder. If it's too far to the next exit and going to take too long, just carefully pull a u-turn, get on the shoulder, and head back the way you came. Slightly terrifying, but better than wasting hours going out of your way trying to get back on the right path.
Try not to fuel in the UK. It's way more expensive than on the mainland. Fuel before you cross the channel.
Never travel empty, or "bobtail." When you go to job selection, click on the dot on the map for the city you're in. This will list ONLY jobs originating in that city. If there are no high paying jobs, just grab a short distance job to a nearby city and try again there. And remember, $ per km is what you're after, don't just grab the highest total payout.
On the same topic, the payout listed includes any skill bonuses for cargo type, etc. It's like sales tax in the EU. Included. What you see on the price tag is what you pay. What you see includes your bonuses. The math is done for you.
3: Your rig.
The cheapest Iveco truck is♥♥♥♥♥♥ Get a Volvo or one of the other trucks that starts with good baseline HP. Trust me, it's worth saving up the little bit of extra money when you're not crawling up hills, or driving in the cities. Once you get the later engine upgrades it's incredibly satisfying passing the trucks that are struggling up hills.
Necessary upgrades. Engines. Transmissions with retarder for the cruise tip above. Allison 6 speed trannies are garbage, don't waste your time. That's it.
Helpful upgrade 1. Put a light bar on the roof with a couple aux lights, but bear in mind they only work when your high beams are on. You'll have to open the light menu (default F4) and check the blocks for aux lights to enable them.
Helpful upgrade 2. Get side skirts and a bull bar. These will dramatically reduce your damage when you inevitably cut a corner too sharp, get sideswiped in a turning circle, whatever. They pay for themselves quickly.
I don't play the heavy cargo DLC, but in the vanilla game I've found absolutely no need whatsoever for 6 wheel chassis under any circumstances. Having the side skirts and added fuel capacity of the 4 wheel chassis is infinitely more useful. Note: I've read the Mercedes trucks can sport side skirts on the 6 wheel chassis, but then you've also got a longer wheelbase to deal with. So call this personal preference as well, but you definitely don't NEED a 6 wheel chassis for any cargo in the vanilla game.
4: The biz.
Unless you've played before, wherever you select for your home garage, chances are you're going to hate it. Don't bother upgrading it. By the time you can afford your first garage, you're going to want to move. Luxembourg is a great first location. Low fuel prices and lots of close-by cities to trade with.
Once you pay your first truck off, take the loan. Not the little loan. The 400k loan. It has the lowest interest rate. More on that in a minute.
Buy a garage in a good hub city and move there. (There are tutorials on how to do this, but hint, you have to move the truck first, then yourself) Once you've moved, sell your starting garage. Buy your second (and third, if you can afford it) trucks and put them there. Buy the♥♥♥♥♥♥Ivecos for your fleet trucks, at least at first. There is NO benefit to buying better trucks for your hired drivers. None. It makes no difference at all. Tip here, if money is super tight you can change the paintjob to a cheaper color to save about $500 per truck. Strip off optional accessories like the sun shield and front mirror to save even more valuable cash.
Then hire and assign your drivers. Try to start with drivers that have at least one point in long distance and one point in ADR. If none are available, no worries. Grab whoever and assign them to trucks. Manage them and set them to focus on ADR or long distance until they have a point or two in each. Then put a point into each of their skills to maximize their job opportunities. Don't want them returning bobtail either.
Back to the loan. The 12% interest on the 400k loan works out to... Well math, but it's less than 2k per day. If you have 2 drivers they'll make about that right from the get-go, so the loan to start your business basically pays for itself. And within a few days their skills will increase and they'll be making more than that, so you're already profiting. If you wait ("I don't need no BANK to pay my way") you'll be losing out on a ton of potential profit.
Luxembourg (and probably most other hub cities) will support a fully upgraded and filled garage as long as the drivers have a point in each skill so they're not competing with each other for jobs.
After your first garage though, don't bother upgrading them to the max. You can only hire about 150 drivers total and if you have a garage in each city that's about 2 drivers per garage.
5: Assorted tips.
Turn up the rain. It's Europe, not the Sahara. I find 20-25% is a good setting.
If you have a music folder on your computer, you can create a shortcut to it and drop it in the documents\ETS2\Music folder to access your music in game. Then hit R to bring up your radio. You may want to turn down the music volume to where you can still hear the truck though.
Never skip skilled parking your trailer. It gets easy after a while and the experience boost is worth learning to do it.
Anyway that's all I can think of off the top of my head and the road is calling. Good luck and have fun. Hopefully I helped someone. Feel free to post anything I may have missed below.
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