Work on Cars without Getting Dirty via Simulation Game

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Car Mechanic Simulator 2019

Latest update of long-running Car Mechanic Simulator series comes with over 40 cars to build, test, and race.

It seems there’s a simulator game for everything these days. Want to work on a farm without breaking a sweat? Farming Simulator it is. Eager to explore the stars above your fields of grain? Kerbal Space Program will take you there. And if you ever dreamed of racing around the greatest circuits this world has to offer, Assetto Corsa and Project CARS are just the ticket.

Thus, it should be no surprise to us that there’s a sim game for being a car mechanic. We were made aware of Car Mechanic Simulator 2019 the other day thanks to Facebook’s algorithm-powered ads, immediately pinging our curiosity.

Car Mechanic Simulator 2019

Per the description we found on Amazon, Car Mechanic Simulator 2019 will let you “build and expand your repair service empire” with over 40 cars of all types (the 2018 edition, for example, had cars from Mercedes, Maserati, and Bentley, among others), plus a garage with over 10 tools and 1,000-plus parts, and a paint booth to make it all shiny and chrome (or matte and cool, your choice).

Car Mechanic Simulator 2019

Once out of the garage, you can take your newly built machine for some tuning around the various test tracks, then take on “a mix of randomly generated jobs for endless gameplay.” Other features include barn finds, auctions, and plenty of chances to snap and share photos of your custom rides.

The latest edition of the Car Mechanic Simulator franchise will hit Xbox One and PS4 consoles on June 25.

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Cameron Aubernon's path to automotive journalism began in the early New '10s. Back then, a friend of hers thought she was an independent fashion blogger.

Aubernon wasn't, so she became one, covering fashion in her own way for the next few years.

From there, she's written for: Louisville.com/Louisville Magazine, Insider Louisville, The Voice-Tribune/The Voice, TOPS Louisville, Jeffersontown Magazine, Dispatches Europe, The Truth About Cars, Automotive News, Yahoo Autos, RideApart, Hagerty, and Street Trucks.

Aubernon also served as the editor-in-chief of a short-lived online society publication in Louisville, Kentucky, interned at the city's NPR affiliate, WFPL-FM, and was the de facto publicist-in-residence for a communal art space near the University of Louisville.

Aubernon is a member of the International Motor Press Association, and the Washington Automotive Press Association.


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