Would you consider the Coney Island, NY Cyclone a true woodie or a hybrid since it has a wood track, but steel supports?
COASTER NERD INCOMING
Yes, it's a true wooden coaster. The fundamental difference in definition between wood and steel coaster lies not in the support structure but in the track itself. A ride is considered "steel" if it has exclusively steel track, generally tubular steel or (more recently) I-box track. It's considered "wood" if it has
primarily wooden track, made up of several layers of 2x8 wooden planks typically lined with a runner rail of thin plate steel, or occassionally with a much thicker piece of 2x8 steel, in which case it is deemed a wood variant called "topper track".
The support structure ultimately makes no difference in the designation of the ride. There are plenty of steel coasters (especially Arrow Mine Trains) which ride on wooden trestle support structures like most iconic wooden coasters--one high profile example is Cedar Point's
Gemini. The reason that most steel coasters DON'T use this technique is that it's less flexible--the wooden trestle isn't as adept at supporting inversions, steep drops and overbanked turns--and it's generally more expensive due to the increased amount of raw material being used. On the flipside some of the most popular wooden coasters ever built ride on steel supports; in particular, MY all-time favorite wooden coaster,
The Voyage at Holiday World, has a steel trestle support structure, and it frankly needs to because it's so massive that wooden trestle supports wouldn't be able to hold the weight of the track, much less endure through hundreds of passes of multi-thousand-kilogram carriages steaming through at 135kph with 3.5+gs of positive acceleration bearing down.
A "Hybrid", strictly speaking, doesn't actually exist in coaster terminology, but is used to describe an event when a (typically aging) wooden ride has the wooden track removed and replaced by steel track; to this date this has only been done by the company Rocky Mountain Construction (RMC), who use steel "I-box" track. The result is, by definition, a steel ride, but often the term Hybrid is used to indicate that the ride was transformed from a previous wooden one. No one to my knowledge has ever accurately described a steel ride on wooden supports that was originally designed and built as such an attraction as a hybrid coaster.
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TL;DR the NY
Cyclone is a true wooden coaster because it still uses wooden track. If it had wooden supports and a steel track insead, some would call it a "hybrid" since it once had a wooden track.
Also, on the actual topic of the thread: super happy to hear about the Steam functionality for two reasons--one, I'm glad to see that it'll be in a high-profile marketplace so that everyone who's heard of RCTW will now also almost definitely hear of PC; and two, if UGC is introduced someday, we can get Steam Workshop functionality! (though I think that's what you guys were already saying.) Thanks for giving us a definite date on when Alpha 3 is coming too. [squeeeeee] My calendar has been marked!