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112 Operator

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112 Operator

Apr 23, 2020

Main game

3.17 average rating based on 29 ratings

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Manage the emergency services in any city in the world! Take calls and dispatch rescue forces. Handle difficult situations, now depending on the weather, terrain and traffic. Help the citizens through cataclysms and natural disasters, becoming a better emergency number operator every day!
Release Dates
Apr 23, 2020 Full Release (Worldwide)
Mac, PC (Microsoft Windows)
Oct 08, 2020 Full Release (Worldwide)
iOS
Oct 22, 2020 Full Release (Worldwide)
Android
Jul 23, 2021 Full Release (Worldwide)
Nintendo Switch
Aug 30, 2024 Full Release (Worldwide)
PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S
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User Stats
1352
In Collection
10
Wish Listed
8
Playing
951
Backlogged
How Long Is 112 Operator?
Main story: 9.7 hours
Main + extras: 15.7 hours
Total completions: 4
Related Content
anarchistica
anarchistica gave Nov 14, 2025
anarchistica gave Nov 14, 2025
Mildly amusing at first
  • Playtime: 4 hours

  • Played: 2025

  • Expectation: Marked as "not interested" (see conclusion)

Intro

In the sequel to 911 Operator you now help people in Europe. You answer calls and have to say the right things, although there are sometimes no wrong choices at all. Incidents appear on a map and you send the correct units to deal with them. Between days you can move the default area, buy new equipment and hire new personnel.

The Good

  • This may actually teach you some first aid knowledge.
  • Some of the calls are interesting.
  • Easy difficulty has fairly relaxed gameplay.

The Bad

  • You're assigned a bunch of extra districts but you get no new vehicles/people and only just enough money to buy one firetruck.
  • Quickly becomes repetitive.
  • The first few days have a bunch of calls, after that you get 0-2 per day.
  • AI Operators are slow and dumb.
  • Bike/horse cops seem 100% useless.
  • Employees have various stats but you can't easily view those and they don't seem all that relevant.
  • Equipment is only shown with microscopis icons.
  • You can't change anything about units during the day (e.g. replace someone injured).
  • I don't think you can see where you've assigned operators during the …
Read More
  • Playtime: 4 hours

  • Played: 2025

  • Expectation: Marked as "not interested" (see conclusion)

Intro

In the sequel to 911 Operator you now help people in Europe. You answer calls and have to say the right things, although there are sometimes no wrong choices at all. Incidents appear on a map and you send the correct units to deal with them. Between days you can move the default area, buy new equipment and hire new personnel.

The Good

  • This may actually teach you some first aid knowledge.
  • Some of the calls are interesting.
  • Easy difficulty has fairly relaxed gameplay.

The Bad

  • You're assigned a bunch of extra districts but you get no new vehicles/people and only just enough money to buy one firetruck.
  • Quickly becomes repetitive.
  • The first few days have a bunch of calls, after that you get 0-2 per day.
  • AI Operators are slow and dumb.
  • Bike/horse cops seem 100% useless.
  • Employees have various stats but you can't easily view those and they don't seem all that relevant.
  • Equipment is only shown with microscopis icons.
  • You can't change anything about units during the day (e.g. replace someone injured).
  • I don't think you can see where you've assigned operators during the day.

The Ugly

  • During the game you tell someone to pull out a knife after being stabbed. That's the one thing you're not supposed to do, you will cut yourself more.

Conclusion

I only installed this to get the steam trading cards but i figured i would give it a try since it was already running. Also, i got some basic emergency response training for work so i figured it might be interesting to sort of use that. The game is kind of amusing for the first few hours because you actually get calls where you have to say the right things. After a few ingame days i only got repetitive basic incident report calls and it became boring.

Read Less
ATadMad
ATadMad gave Apr 29, 2020
ATadMad gave Apr 29, 2020
ATadMad's review of 112 Operator

My feelings are very mixed about this game.

When I saw that it was being developed, I was excited. I wanted to see how they would improve from the first game and what new concepts they would introduce.

Nothing is the answer. Nothing is different except for a new looking UI and being able to hire your own dispatchers to manage districts for you so that you don't even have to do anything.

Having said that, this game is both simultaneously repetitive and stupidly addictive. Like, despite what I said above, I've still managed to sink in 12+ hours and I only got it yesterday.

If you enjoyed the first game, then you'll enjoy this one because it's essentially more of the same.

Jevnation
Jevnation gave Oct 14, 2020
Jevnation gave Oct 14, 2020
More of the same, but still enjoyable

Similar to its predecessor, 911 Operator, this game puts you in the emergency call operator's seat again and puts you in the work shift to handle incoming calls and dispatch personnel to handle various incidents. Do it right and in time and it will favour your career and the future circumstances you'll handle.

The campaign mode allows you to choose one of the select capital cities for the career you want to build on. There are story cases that come and go but a few that will last over days and builds some intrigue over what's happening in the city. However, once I've finished the campaign in one city, I've seen most of it all.

The neat feature that graced 911 was the map generator using actual GPS data to generate a city of your choice, even the city/town/village you're living in. I also enjoy this sober atmosphere that's relevant to the situations and treatment handling done in the real life, which is in fact educational.

In the end, 112 is sort of a 911 rehash with some new case variations and global-focused instead of being in the USA. I enjoyed it while it lasted but players new to the …

Read More

Similar to its predecessor, 911 Operator, this game puts you in the emergency call operator's seat again and puts you in the work shift to handle incoming calls and dispatch personnel to handle various incidents. Do it right and in time and it will favour your career and the future circumstances you'll handle.

The campaign mode allows you to choose one of the select capital cities for the career you want to build on. There are story cases that come and go but a few that will last over days and builds some intrigue over what's happening in the city. However, once I've finished the campaign in one city, I've seen most of it all.

The neat feature that graced 911 was the map generator using actual GPS data to generate a city of your choice, even the city/town/village you're living in. I also enjoy this sober atmosphere that's relevant to the situations and treatment handling done in the real life, which is in fact educational.

In the end, 112 is sort of a 911 rehash with some new case variations and global-focused instead of being in the USA. I enjoyed it while it lasted but players new to the franchise are well-recommended to give this strategy simulator a try.

Read Less
anarchistica
anarchistica updated their status Nov 13, 2025
anarchistica updated their status Nov 13, 2025

Erm, a word of warning; unlike what this game tells you don't pull out a knife if you've been stabbed. Oof.

anarchistica
anarchistica updated their status Aug 7, 2025
anarchistica updated their status Aug 7, 2025

Free @ Epic this week (repeat):

https://store.epicgames.com/en-US/p/112-operator-f34b0b

Mobile version is free too but requires the app or just use this link:

Link to claim all games

EjKejEj
EjKejEj updated their status Oct 28, 2021
EjKejEj updated their status Oct 28, 2021

A sequel to 112 with new futuristic/technical fancy looking UI. Aside from that, the only new thing is that you can hire dispatchers for districts (so you don't have to play). Like 112 gets repetitive after a while.