R
REVLIZE
Find a game
SIGNAL DATABASE
Euro Truck Simulator 2 - Holland Style Tuning Pack
HIDDEN GEM
APPID 4400940
IndieSimulation

Euro Truck Simulator 2 - Holland Style Tuning Pack

SCS Software· 2026-06-30
Player receptionVery Positive · 94%
Spotted at121 reviews
Gameplay signal

See the game in motion.

6 Steam screenshots
113 reviews indexed. 53 analyzed across 3 languages.

A Tuning Pack That Finishes What Community Mods Started—But Not Quite All the Way

Players celebrate reclaiming Holland Style customization as paid content, then immediately note what SCS left out.

The thesis

Holland Style sells restraint and completion to a divided community—players either celebrate finally owning paid cosmetics that match their vision, or resent that the official pack leaves the exact pieces they wanted behind.

Community signal

Across the analyzed reviews, gratitude for official Holland Style cosmetics coexists with immediate specification of what's missing—a pattern suggesting players use the pack as a first step, not a final statement

Turkish and Russian players emphasize the interior transformation (cab lights, steering wheels, decorations) as the pack's most satisfying feature, while English players focus more on exterior completeness and note specific accessories by name

No recurring technical issues (crashes, bugs, incompatibility) appear in the sampled reviews; the friction is entirely scope-based rather than execution-based

Synthesized from 53 public Steam reviews · 3 languages

Best for
  • Players invested in truck aesthetics who want official, update-safe cosmetics and don't need every possible Holland Style detail
  • Truck customizers who appreciate interior transformation and want to make their cab feel personalized without mod dependency
  • Players who view this as a first official step and trust SCS will add more Holland Style content later
Skip it if
  • Completionists expecting a canonical Holland Style kit—the pack is intentionally scoped and omits rim options, side skirts, and wheels for some truck generations
  • Players who already use high-quality mods and expect paid content to exceed what the free community already created
  • Anyone frustrated by cosmetic DLC strategy in general
What is Euro Truck Simulator 2 - Holland Style Tuning Pack?

Holland Style Tuning Pack is a cosmetic DLC for Euro Truck Simulator 2 that adds paint jobs, interior light boxes, horns, mudflaps, steering wheels, and exterior accessories inspired by Dutch truck customization culture. The pack works across most truck models in the game, with some accessories locked to specific vehicles. It costs approximately $4 USD.

Store framing

Holland Style is one of the most distinctive and popular trends in European truck customization. This DLC brings licensed accessories (light boxes, horns, mudflaps, Danish lights, double burners, steering wheels, interior lights, pennants, and toys) from real manufacturers, plus paint jobs tailored to specific truck models, letting players customize their cabin and exterior.

Players are selling

Players frame Holland Style as the pack they've been asking for—finally delivered. They emphasize the pleasure of transforming their truck's look and interior, the quality of execution, and the reasonable price. But they also consistently name the specific pieces SCS left out, suggesting the pack is less a complete vision of Holland Style and more a strong first addition to a tradition that community mods have already defined. Players who wanted rims, side skirts, or specific wheel options on older trucks feel the absence acutely.

The pitch

Holland Style lands in a strange emotional space for a $4 cosmetic DLC: players are genuinely grateful it exists, but they're also remarkably specific about what's missing. The gap between expectation and delivery runs through almost every positive review—and that gap is the pack's actual story.

English-language players frame this as a "finally" moment. Reviewers waited years for these options. One player says they would have paid 35 euros; another cites specific horns they've wanted "for the longest time." The gratitude is real. But the same reviews that praise the pack also list absences: no Holland Style rims, no side skirts, missing retro three-spoke wheels for older trucks, no painted versions of illuminated logos. One player rates it 5/10 while calling it positive—a contradiction that reveals how incomplete completion can feel.

Turkish players add a different texture: they emphasize personalization and the pleasure of transforming their truck's interior. Multiple reviews focus on how accessories change the cab's "atmosphere" or let you make a truck "look like a truck show video." The excitement is less about owning official content and more about the visible transformation it enables. One reviewer waited 14 years for polished metal panels and jokes they might wait another 14 for the next addition—accepting incompleteness as the condition of playing.

Russian reviewers expected a paint job pack and found a full accessory suite. The shock of abundance is the story. One player says they expected "just another recolor," but found steering wheels, cab lights, mudflaps, and interior signs instead. They call it "one of the best cosmetic DLCs" specifically because it exceeded a low baseline. But even this surprise includes a caveat: another reviewer notes the pack "from the name" delivers only some pieces of the Holland Style tradition and says community mods are the real option for serious customization.

Across all three languages, no recurring technical complaint appears. No crashes, no clipping, no compatibility failures dominate the reviews. The barrier is purely scope: this is a pack that teaches players exactly what it doesn't include by showing them what it does.

The price ($4) shapes reception too. Most reviews mention it as absurdly cheap for what they got. A few players note that free, higher-quality mods exist—but even those critics acknowledge SCS delivered legitimate value. The DLC isn't better than the modding community's work; it's official, it's convenient, and it's endorsed. That alone justifies the purchase for players who want their truck to feel like an intentional choice rather than a mod folder.

Where the pack actually moves people is in the specificity of cosmetics. A player doesn't want "more customization." They want the iconic klaxon horn they've always wanted. They want the hanging yellow bumper lights. They want steering wheels that match their cab color. The DLC satisfies these concrete wants, then frustrates them by excluding others. It's not a gap in quality—it's a gap in completeness, and the community feels it sharply.

Why players are paying attention
  • 01Specific cosmetics they've wanted for years (klaxon horn, hanging yellow lights, three-spoke steering wheels) are now official and guaranteed to work across game updates
  • 02Interior customization transforms the cab's personality—light boxes, colored steering wheels, and themed decals make the interior feel like a personal space rather than a generic cabin
  • 03The pack works across most trucks instead of locking content to one model, multiplying the perceived value per dollar spent
  • 04SCS delivered beyond a low baseline (players expected a paint pack, received accessories too), creating a surprise-satisfaction effect
From the reviews

Честно, я ожидал, что это будут просто очередные раскраски и всё.

[H1] Damn, totally hot DLC SCS!

На данный момент это наверное, одно из лучших косметических длс для нашей любимой игры.

SCS did a great job, definitely one of the best Tuning Packs ever released.

Sentences extracted from highest-voted public Steam reviews. Unedited.

Objection

Scope limitation. Players repeatedly note which pieces the pack excludes—rims, side skirts, specific wheel options for older trucks, painted logo versions—and several mention that community mods already cover these gaps in higher visual quality. One reviewer notes the pack was "touted as expansive" but feels narrow. The objection isn't that SCS did something wrong; it's that the DLC defines itself by incompleteness. A few reviews cite low polygon counts (512-pixel logos, mudflaps that feel generic) as a quality issue, but this complaint appears in a minority of sampled reviews.

Multilingual signal
english
high confidence · 19 reviews

English reviewers treat the pack as a checklist—they name specific items they wanted (klaxon horn, yellow lights, retro wheels) and map the pack against that list. When items are missing, they note it as a direct absence. This language community's feedback is granular and comparative (better mods exist, but this is official).

turkish
high confidence · 18 reviews

Turkish reviewers emphasize sensory transformation and personalization—the interior lights and steering wheels "change the atmosphere," making the cab feel like home. Less focus on what's missing, more focus on what the cab becomes. One reviewer jokes about waiting 14 more years, accepting incompleteness as part of the game's rhythm.

russian
high confidence · 16 reviews

Russian players frame the pack as exceeding expectations (they expected paint jobs, received accessories too). Surprise at abundance is their entry point. However, one negative review explicitly states that despite the name, the pack doesn't deliver a complete Holland Style vision and that community mods remain superior. The positive reviews don't resolve this—they just reset the baseline lower.

Community lenses — what each language group noticed distinctly.

Final verdict

Holland Style is a complete DLC that feels incomplete, which is precisely why players respond to it with gratitude and immediate critique. The pack succeeds because it addresses a genuine, long-standing community request and delivers quality execution. But it succeeds within a narrow scope: players use it to finish their truck's look, then reach for mods for the pieces SCS omitted. This is not a flaw in execution—the sampled reviews show no recurring quality complaints—it's a deliberate design choice. SCS released a strong first step and left room for future packs. The community knows this. They're okay with it, mostly because they've waited so long that even partial delivery feels like recognition. Whether that satisfaction lasts depends on whether SCS continues adding Holland Style content or moves on to other customization trends.

Signal data
LOVE94

% positive reviews

GEM75

Under-the-radar potential

GAP45

Store framing vs player language

SOUL72

Voice and personality in reviews

CURIOSITY65

Would a stranger click buy?

315 reviews currently indexed

53 analyzed · english, turkish, russian

Last synthesized: Jul 1, 2026 · 53 reviews in that synthesis

Frequently asked
Is Holland Style worth $4?

Yes. Players call it cheap for the content delivered. The value is strongest if you want official, update-safe cosmetics instead of mods. If you need rims or side skirts, the pack doesn't include them.

What's actually in the pack?

Paint jobs, interior light boxes, horns (including the iconic klaxon), mudflaps, steering wheels, Danish lights, pennants, toys, and decorative accessories. Most work across all trucks; light boxes are limited to specific high-roof sleeper cabs.

Does this replace community mods?

No. The pack is official and won't break on game updates, which is its main advantage. But community mods offer more options and sometimes higher visual quality. The two coexist.

Why do positive reviews list what's missing?

Players are grateful SCS finally delivered official Holland Style content, but they've spent years asking for specific pieces (rims, side skirts, wheel options). The pack satisfies some wants and highlights others it doesn't address.

Will SCS add more Holland Style content?

Unknown. Reviews speculate about future packs, but SCS hasn't committed. The pack is positioned as a first step, not a complete vision.

Synthesized from public Steam reviews. Not affiliated with Valve Corporation.

Help improve this analysis

Does this analysis represent what players are saying?

Similar signals

More games with overlapping community patterns.