Compara los precios de Hotshot Racing en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Sumo Digital Ltd. Publicado por Curve Digital. Lanzado el 10/9/2020. Disponible en PC, Nintendo Switch, Xbox. Géneros: Action, Indie, Racing.

Four-player split-screen on PC in 2020 felt like a miracle. Hotshot Racing earns its keep at the couch, but solo players will chew through it fast.

My first thought booting Hotshot Racing was straightforward delight: here is a PC arcade racer that actually supports four-player split-screen, and that alone puts it in rare company. The low-poly, hyper-colourful aesthetic is an unabashed love letter to the Sega Rally and Virtua Racing era, and it lands. Tracks set across coastal, jungle, alpine, and Las Vegas desert environments pop with vivid colour, and the whole thing runs at a locked 60FPS in single-player that makes the speed feel genuinely physical. If you grew up feeding coins into Daytona USA cabinets or grinding through Ridge Racer on a first-gen PlayStation, there is a very specific dopamine hit waiting for you here. The core loop is drift-to-boost, and it takes a proper learning curve to click. You tap the brake mid-corner to initiate a slide, then wrestle the back end with the left stick. Nail it and you feed a boost meter split into four chunks, which you can spend for a burst of speed down the next straight. Slipstreaming also charges boost, so pack racing is rewarded. Pick your driver carefully: each of the eight characters (Keiko, Xing, Marcus, Viktor, and the rest) comes with four cars tuned toward different stat priorities, whether that is top speed, acceleration, or drift angle. The balanced cars are the best entry point for newcomers; the high-drift options are for players who want to feel like they are perpetually on the edge of control. Where Hotshot Racing gets messier is the AI. Rubber-banding on Expert difficulty is aggressive enough to feel punitive rather than competitive, and the CPU drivers will happily shunt you into a wall mid-drift to reclaim a position. It is the kind of behaviour that gets loud complaints from the couch, which can cut either way depending on your group's temperament. The extra modes, Cops and Robbers and Drive or Explode, are chaotic fun in short bursts but neither has the mechanical depth to sustain long sessions. Drive or Explode (stay above the minimum speed or your car detonates, with that threshold climbing each checkpoint) is genuinely tense the first few times. Cops and Robbers is enjoyable chaos that becomes confusing about who is actually winning. Both modes are available in split-screen and eight-player online, which is the right call. Solo longevity is the honest weak point. There are sixteen base tracks across four cups in Grand Prix mode (the free Big Boss Bundle DLC added a few more), and you will cycle through them quickly. Cosmetic unlocks via in-race earnings give you something to chase, covering body parts, paint jobs, and driver outfits, but there is no career structure or story mode to anchor a solo run. The online player base on PC has thinned out since launch, so finding populated lobbies requires some scheduling with friends. That is fine if you treat this as a couch game first, which you should. As a "four controllers, Saturday night" game, it absolutely delivers. As a game you plan to sink a hundred solo hours into, it does not. For wheel and pedal users, do not expect a simulation setup to give you an edge here. This is a gamepad game through and through, and the brake-tap drift mechanic works best on an analogue stick. A standard controller is the correct tool, and accessibility is one of Hotshot Racing's genuine strengths: the handling model is approachable enough that a non-gamer can be competitive within a race or two, which is exactly what you want when the fourth player is your partner who "doesn't really play games." Riley, Scout Team

Hotshot Racing

Hotshot Racing

10 sept 2020Sumo Digital LtdCurve Digital
GamerScout opina

Four-player split-screen on PC in 2020 felt like a miracle. Hotshot Racing earns its keep at the couch, but solo players will chew through it fast.

PCNintendo SwitchXbox
Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum
Mejor precio disponible
€0.00
en N/A
Mínimo histórico: €0.70

Comparar precios(0 tiendas)

Cargando precios...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Historial de precios

Historical low
€0.705 Jun 2026
Keyshops
€0.66€0.81€0.96€1.115 Jun11 Jun17 Jun22 Jun28 Jun
Tracking prices since 5 Jun 2026
Create alert

Capturas y multimedia

Captura

Acerca de Hotshot Racing

My first thought booting Hotshot Racing was straightforward delight: here is a PC arcade racer that actually supports four-player split-screen, and that alone puts it in rare company. The low-poly, hyper-colourful aesthetic is an unabashed love letter to the Sega Rally and Virtua Racing era, and it lands. Tracks set across coastal, jungle, alpine, and Las Vegas desert environments pop with vivid colour, and the whole thing runs at a locked 60FPS in single-player that makes the speed feel genuinely physical. If you grew up feeding coins into Daytona USA cabinets or grinding through Ridge Racer on a first-gen PlayStation, there is a very specific dopamine hit waiting for you here. The core loop is drift-to-boost, and it takes a proper learning curve to click. You tap the brake mid-corner to initiate a slide, then wrestle the back end with the left stick. Nail it and you feed a boost meter split into four chunks, which you can spend for a burst of speed down the next straight. Slipstreaming also charges boost, so pack racing is rewarded. Pick your driver carefully: each of the eight characters (Keiko, Xing, Marcus, Viktor, and the rest) comes with four cars tuned toward different stat priorities, whether that is top speed, acceleration, or drift angle. The balanced cars are the best entry point for newcomers; the high-drift options are for players who want to feel like they are perpetually on the edge of control. Where Hotshot Racing gets messier is the AI. Rubber-banding on Expert difficulty is aggressive enough to feel punitive rather than competitive, and the CPU drivers will happily shunt you into a wall mid-drift to reclaim a position. It is the kind of behaviour that gets loud complaints from the couch, which can cut either way depending on your group's temperament. The extra modes, Cops and Robbers and Drive or Explode, are chaotic fun in short bursts but neither has the mechanical depth to sustain long sessions. Drive or Explode (stay above the minimum speed or your car detonates, with that threshold climbing each checkpoint) is genuinely tense the first few times. Cops and Robbers is enjoyable chaos that becomes confusing about who is actually winning. Both modes are available in split-screen and eight-player online, which is the right call. Solo longevity is the honest weak point. There are sixteen base tracks across four cups in Grand Prix mode (the free Big Boss Bundle DLC added a few more), and you will cycle through them quickly. Cosmetic unlocks via in-race earnings give you something to chase, covering body parts, paint jobs, and driver outfits, but there is no career structure or story mode to anchor a solo run. The online player base on PC has thinned out since launch, so finding populated lobbies requires some scheduling with friends. That is fine if you treat this as a couch game first, which you should. As a "four controllers, Saturday night" game, it absolutely delivers. As a game you plan to sink a hundred solo hours into, it does not. For wheel and pedal users, do not expect a simulation setup to give you an edge here. This is a gamepad game through and through, and the brake-tap drift mechanic works best on an analogue stick. A standard controller is the correct tool, and accessibility is one of Hotshot Racing's genuine strengths: the handling model is approachable enough that a non-gamer can be competitive within a race or two, which is exactly what you want when the fourth player is your partner who "doesn't really play games."

Riley
Riley · Scout Team

Sports & racing

Etiquetas

steamSplit-Screen Co-opDrift MechanicsCouch MultiplayerLow-Poly AestheticBoost ManagementRubber-Band AIArcade Checkpoint RacingGamepad-Optimised

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

Processor
Intel Core i3 4130T (2.9GHz) / AMD FX 6300 (3.5 GHz)
Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce GTX 770 (1GB) / AMD Radeon HD 7870 (1GB)
DirectX
Version 11
Network
Broadband Interne…

Sigue explorando

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Hotshot Racing.

Reseñas y valoraciones

Steam
76%(2,351)

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Sumo Digital Ltd
Distribuidora
Curve Digital
Fecha de lanzamiento
10 sept 2020

Alerta de precio

¡Recibe un aviso cuando el precio baje de tu objetivo!

Crear alerta

Más de Sumo Digital Ltd

Compra mejor: guías útiles

¿Buscas más? Mira juegos como Hotshot Racing →

Preguntas frecuentes sobre Hotshot Racing

¿Cuánto cuesta Hotshot Racing?

El precio de Hotshot Racing cambia a menudo y varía según la tienda, la edición y la región. La tabla de precios en vivo de esta página compara las ofertas más baratas en stock de tiendas de claves de confianza como Eneba y Kinguin, para que siempre veas el precio más bajo actual antes de comprar.

¿Dónde puedo comprar Hotshot Racing más barato?

Compara los precios de Hotshot Racing en todas las tiendas verificadas en la tabla de precios de esta página. Listamos las ofertas de claves y tiendas más baratas en stock, actualizadas con frecuencia, para que siempre veas la mejor oferta actual antes de comprar.

¿En qué plataformas está disponible Hotshot Racing?

Hotshot Racing está disponible en PC, Nintendo Switch, Xbox.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Hotshot Racing?

Hotshot Racing se lanzó el 10 de septiembre de 2020.

¿Quién desarrolló Hotshot Racing?

Hotshot Racing fue desarrollado por Sumo Digital Ltd y publicado por Curve Digital.