Pieter de Groote wrote:It's like real life. Most of us prefer a private car (with chauffeur) over a public railroad system with tight schedules. In real life there's some cost consequences.
In cantr, there are some huge cost consequences of a vehicle requiring an operater. People are
expensive...the good ones, at least. An uncrewed, reliable transport device seems too powerful.
Pieter de Groote wrote:I think the scheduled railroad system would be best. Have some advantages and some disadvantages over privately owned cars.
The RL advanteges are that trains can be both faster and larger than road vehicles, and the disadvantages are that it requires large combined vehicles (trains, instead of single cars) and tracks rather than roads.
Pieter de Groote wrote:If it's going to be implemented as a scheduled train system, it's going to be for the public use of towns and the required investments should be much lower than if it's going to be implemented as a theftproof private race car.
It's not implemented as either. It would be implemented as either an automatic trasport system or an extremely restricted conventional vehicle. As always, the use is up to characters...
I would expect a fully automated robotic train to cost more than the conventional variety, myself.
The only way I could see trains actually getting public use is if they're implemented in a manner that makes it trivial, like the automatic scheduling. And there's a reason that public services in cantr don't really exist. Cantr governments often play at being sophisticated and federal, but an an almost universal rule they have no taxation and negligible accountability, making them little more than private businesses with pretensions. Running a costly public service like a commuter rail makes no sense in this context.