Train Controller Overview
Train Controller was one of those games you'd find tucked away on a Flash portal in the late 2000s. It didn't have a big studio name attached to it, just a simple, functional title that promised a specific kind of puzzle. You loaded it up in your browser, and it was immediately clear what you were in for. The screen showed a rail yard, some carriages, and a locomotive waiting for your instructions.
You control the switches. That's your entire job. With a click, you change the points on the track, directing the train forward or back. Your goal is to assemble the cars into a specific order, often matching colored freight cars or getting them lined up in a certain sequence. The train moves on its own once you set a path, so you have to think a step or two ahead. If you make a wrong turn, you have to wait for the engine to complete its current route before you can try again. The pace is slow and methodical, not frantic. It feels like solving a quiet, moving diagram where every click has a consequence.