Then, you have the privilege of watching as the car is immediately and automatically painted before your eyes – you don’t even get the option of doing that yourself. From there, you’ll have to fix the car’s paint work, first rotating the right stick to smooth out any scratches and then paying to select a new colour from a menu. The immediate problem is how repetitive this game is, tasking you with purchasing a clapped-out old banger from a point on the map – quite what the map is there for, it’s never really made clear it just seems like an underwhelming attempt at spicing up a simple list of cars. In just a few moments this car will look unrecognisable… but you won’t feel like you made any contribution to the makeover. But does that experience translate well into the medium of video games? The answer is it should, but it certainly doesn’t when it comes to Car Mechanic Simulator on Switch. Stumbling across those shows where people buy old banger cars, tear them apart and build them up again into something shiny is a pretty sure-fire way of guaranteeing some good, light entertainment on a weekday afternoon. I must admit: I love cycling through the entertainment channels on Sky.
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