offline accessBuy The Bus Steam Offline Account
A The Bus Steam offline account is a ready Steam account that already owns The Bus, priced at a flat $9.99 instead of the usual ~$39.99 — roughly 75% less. You log in, switch Steam to Offline Mode, and drive the full single-player Berlin routes. Delivery is instant and automated, you pay with crypto, and it works worldwide with no region lock.
Key facts
- Price on bonege
- $9.99 — one-time
- Full Steam price
- ~$39.99 (save ~75%)
- What it is
- Shared Steam offline account that already owns The Bus
- How you play
- Steam Offline Mode — solo Berlin routes
- Delivery
- Instant & automated
- Payment
- Crypto — USDT (TRC20), BTC, ETH, LTC
- Region
- Worldwide, no region lock
- Guarantee
- Free replacement if access stops
What you get
- Steam account that already owns the game
- Step-by-step offline-mode guide
- Instant automated delivery after payment
- Replacement guarantee if access stops
Buy The Bus cheap — offline account
What you get
You get login access to a Steam account that already owns The Bus, ready to use the moment your payment confirms. This is not a Steam key, not a gift, and not a subscription — it is a shared offline account where the game is already installed in the library. After purchase you receive the credentials, sign in through the normal Steam client, download The Bus, and set Steam to Offline Mode to start driving. The whole point is simplicity: no activation codes to redeem, no waiting for a gift invite, no regional restrictions blocking the store page.
The price is a flat $9.99, paid once. The Bus normally sells for around $39.99 on Steam, so this offline account works out to roughly 75% less for the same single-player experience. You drive the same 1:1 scale Berlin map, operate the same articulated city buses, and run the same passenger routes past the Victory Column, Brandenburg Gate and the Alexa shopping centre that the full game ships with. Nothing about the driving simulation is cut down — you are simply reaching it through a shared offline account instead of buying a full-price copy for your own profile.
Every The Bus offline account on bonege comes with a free replacement guarantee. If access stops working for any reason on our side, message support and we send a fresh account so you keep playing. That covers the realistic risk of a shared account and means your $9.99 is protected rather than a one-shot gamble.
How a The Bus offline account works
The Bus is a single-player city bus simulator, which makes it a clean fit for offline play. After you buy, you install Steam (if you do not already have it), log in with the account details we send, and let The Bus download. Once it is installed you open Steam, choose Go Offline from the Steam menu, and the client stops needing a live connection. From that point you can drive your shifts, learn the Berlin routes, manage doors and ticketing, and watch passenger behaviour without Steam phoning home for ownership checks.
Offline Mode is what keeps the experience stable on a shared account. Because you are not competing for an online session and The Bus has no required multiplayer, you and the account owner do not collide — the game simply runs locally against the licence stored on the account. You drive the full career and free-drive content the same way an owner would: picking a line, following the timetable, handling traffic and weather along the 1:1 Berlin streets, and earning your way through the simulation at your own pace.
A few practical notes keep things smooth. Treat this as your personal offline copy: do not change the account password, email or other settings, since other players share the same login. Keep Steam in Offline Mode while you play The Bus, and if you ever get signed out, just sign back in with the details we provided and return to Offline Mode. Following those simple steps is all it takes to enjoy uninterrupted The Bus offline sessions for the long term.
Cheaper than a Steam key
A Steam key for The Bus means buying a full-price licence — typically around $39.99 — and tying it permanently to your own account. A The Bus offline account on bonege costs a flat $9.99, which is about 75% cheaper, because you are sharing access to a copy that already exists rather than purchasing a brand-new licence. For a single-player simulator that you mostly want to sit down and drive, paying a quarter of the price for the same routes and the same buses is a straightforward win.
There is another difference worth being clear about. With a key you own the game forever on your profile and can play online or offline however you like. With an offline account you play The Bus in Steam Offline Mode on shared credentials, which is the trade-off that makes the cheaper price possible. The Bus has no competitive online mode you would be missing, so for most drivers the offline account delivers effectively the full game at the cheapest price — you get the cars, the city, and the simulation without the full-price ticket.
Payment is built around crypto rather than cards, which keeps checkout fast and removes the regional payment friction that key resellers often hit. You pick USDT (TRC20), BTC, ETH or LTC, send the $9.99, and the account is issued automatically once the transaction confirms. No card details, no billing region to match, no store-page lock — just the cheapest practical route into The Bus.
Is it safe?
Let us be honest about what this is: a shared offline Steam account, not an official Steam key and not your own personal licence. We do not pretend otherwise, and we do not claim it is endorsed by Valve or the developer. What makes it safe to use is sticking to Offline Mode and treating the account as read-only for settings — you drive The Bus locally and leave the credentials untouched. Because the game is single-player, there is no online matchmaking or anti-cheat layer to trip over while you play.
On the delivery side, the process is automated and instant, so there is no manual back-and-forth where details could be mishandled. You pay with crypto, receive the account immediately, and start downloading. If anything goes wrong with access at any point, the free replacement guarantee is the backstop: contact support and we provide a working account so your $9.99 keeps its value. That guarantee is the core of why buyers trust the shared-account model here.
The sensible mindset is to think of this as the cheapest way to experience The Bus solo, with a safety net, rather than a permanent purchase you fully own. If you want a forever copy on your own profile with no shared access, a full-price key is the alternative. If you mainly want to drive Berlin routes for a fraction of the cost and you are comfortable playing in Offline Mode, the offline account is a safe, practical choice backed by replacement support.
About The Bus
The Bus puts you behind the wheel of modern articulated city buses on a 1:1 recreation of Berlin. You drive real-feeling routes through the German capital, rolling past landmarks like the Victory Column, the Brandenburg Gate and the Alexa shopping centre while managing the everyday rhythm of public transport. It is a detailed simulation rather than an arcade racer: you follow timetables, open and close doors at stops, watch your mirrors, and deal with city traffic, pedestrians and changing conditions as you carry passengers from one end of a line to the other.
What sets the simulator apart is its commitment to authenticity and scale. The Berlin map is built to match the city street by street, so the routes feel like genuine commutes rather than a generic loop, and the buses are modelled closely enough that handling, braking and passenger flow all matter. As a Simulation-genre title it rewards patience and attention to detail — the satisfaction comes from running a clean, on-time shift through living city streets, not from chasing a finish line.
Because it is a focused single-player experience, The Bus is exactly the kind of game that suits a Steam offline account. You can sink hours into learning the lines, mastering the controls and exploring Berlin at your own pace, all from a ready-made offline account at $9.99 instead of paying the full ~$39.99. For simulation fans who want a calm, immersive driving sim without the full-price commitment, this offline account is the cheapest comfortable way in.
// pros
- About 75% cheaper — $9.99 instead of ~$39.99 for the same single-player game
- Instant, automated delivery the moment payment confirms
- Full The Bus campaign and Berlin routes playable in Steam Offline Mode
- Pay with crypto (USDT, BTC, ETH, LTC) — no card, no region lock
- Free replacement guarantee if access ever stops working
// good to know
- · Single-player / offline only — no online or multiplayer use
- · You play in Steam Offline Mode on a shared account, not your own personal profile
Playing The Bus offline
Pay with crypto
Checkout in USDT, BTC, ETH or LTC — no card needed.
Get the login
We deliver the account that owns the game, automatically, in minutes.
Play offline
Sign in, switch Steam to Offline Mode with our guide, and enjoy the full game.
The Bus — questions
Can you play The Bus offline?
Yes. The Bus is a single-player city bus simulator, so after you log in you set Steam to Offline Mode and drive the full Berlin routes locally — no live connection needed.
How much is The Bus on bonege?
A The Bus offline account is a flat $9.99, compared with the usual ~$39.99 Steam price — roughly 75% less for the same single-player game.
How fast is delivery?
Delivery is instant and automated. As soon as your crypto payment confirms, the account details are issued so you can sign in and start downloading The Bus right away.
How do I pay?
Payment is crypto only — USDT (TRC20), BTC, ETH or LTC. There are no cards and no region restrictions, so checkout works worldwide.
What's the difference vs a Steam key?
A key is a full-price licence tied to your own account. This is a shared offline account that already owns The Bus, played in Offline Mode, which is why it costs about 75% less.
Is it safe?
It is a shared offline account, not an official key. Play in Offline Mode and leave the account settings alone, and you are covered by a free replacement guarantee if access ever stops.



