Transport Fever

Transport Fever

37 ratings
Central USA Map - More Rivers
   
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Scenario: USA
Misc: Map
File Size
Posted
Updated
3.758 MB
17 Dec, 2016 @ 5:21pm
17 Dec, 2016 @ 7:25pm
3 Change Notes ( view )

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Central USA Map - More Rivers

Description
Covers Iowa to Pennsylvania, Ontario to northern Florida. Most major cities are reflected. Resources and industry are typically found where medium or smaller cities might be.

This map is based on Grendil's Central USA map, but has many more rivers. Some are navigable, others are just there to force you to deal with them.

I have also adjusted the positioning of a few towns to better reflect their real locations and renamed a couple. I intend to set up industries to be more reflective of the main products of those smaller towns, when I have time to do so.

Recommended Settings for best appearance:
Terrain: European
Trees: European
Environment: European
All others American.
40 Comments
March  [author] 17 Sep, 2018 @ 10:43pm 
You have to set the terrain, trees, and environment to European.
The Mandarin Skyrush 17 Sep, 2018 @ 10:11pm 
how to make map green?
jtgrieger 20 Nov, 2017 @ 4:35pm 
Love this map. Mostly just passengers for me but started a tanker fleet up the Mississippi.
steve silent 18 Sep, 2017 @ 4:21am 
FrenchFriedDakoter 6 Sep, 2017 @ 4:27pm 
so there for i cant run ships up the river to Chicago.
FrenchFriedDakoter 6 Sep, 2017 @ 4:25pm 
The River that Connects Peoria to the Mississippi has a texture glitch right at the meeting point just north east of St. Louis.
March  [author] 7 Mar, 2017 @ 10:52am 
I can try to extend the map slightly, but this is already a 4k map. Some people have made larger, and so I will look into that. I can't promise anything.

Also, I have to actually make the already promised updates to the map that I owe my subscribers. I am hopeful that I will have time soon.
Sigert 7 Mar, 2017 @ 10:11am 
can u make one with New York please? :)
March  [author] 25 Feb, 2017 @ 10:37pm 
Heh, yeah. I'm using the more colloquial definition of "central US" which is the Mid-west. Which isn't central at all.
Oreo 25 Feb, 2017 @ 9:03pm 
lol just curious considering it is one of the *central* most states