Lukas Novak, a veteran modder from Brno, didn’t just imagine it. He built it.
Just outside Lille, clouds gathered—not the sudden, scripted downpour of vanilla ETS2, but a living, volumetric thing. She watched the leading edge of the storm crawl across a golden field. When it hit, it didn't just trigger a “wet road” flag. The raindrops struck the windshield as individual particles, blown by physics-based wind. She had to adjust her wipers not to a preset interval, but to the actual intensity of the deluge. The world blurred. Headlights from oncoming traffic—actual AI cars that now drove with nervous, human-like hesitance—refracted through the water film on the glass, creating streaks of orange and white. euro truck simulator 2 unreal engine
The clip went viral.
He posted one final update two weeks later. A video. His truck, a beat-up DAF XF, parked at a scenic overlook in Austria. The camera orbited slowly. The sun set behind the Alps, and Lumen caught every bounce of light—from the snowcaps, to the lake below, to the chrome mirror housing, to the tired eyes of the driver model Lukas had sculpted from a single photo of his late father, a real long-haul trucker. Lukas Novak, a veteran modder from Brno, didn’t