
ATV Drift & Tricks
An arcade quad racer with eight multiplayer modes and splitscreen support, let down by slippery physics and controls that split the community straight down the middle.
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About ATV Drift & Tricks
My patience for bad vehicle handling runs thin fast, and ATV Drift & Tricks tested it within the first few minutes. The quad physics sit in a frustrating middle zone: too arcade-loose to feel grounded, but not polished enough to be fun-loose like a proper arcade racer. Players routinely describe the handling as sliding on ice, and the air-control scheme, which reuses the same inputs as ground acceleration and braking, makes trick landings feel like a guessing game rather than something you learn and master. That is a real problem when the whole point is chaining drifts out of jumps to build score. On paper the mode list is decent. You get eight options across solo and multiplayer, including League, Time Trial, Quick Race, Hot Lap, King of the Road, Golden Helmet, Last One Standing, and Hunter. There is also a career Season mode that ramps up gradually and unlocks racers and content as you climb the rankings. Online supports up to ten players simultaneously, and splitscreen local co-op is present for couch sessions. For a game in this tier, that breadth of modes is genuinely worth acknowledging. The track environments, covering deserts, forests, mountains, oases, lakes, and rivers, have some visual variety too, even if the actual layouts feel flat and uninspired once you have lapped them a few times. Where it partially recovers is in the trick system. Named stunts like the superman, rodeo, and heart attack are in there, and there is a turbo mechanic tied to clean landings that adds a small layer of skill expression. A timing mini-game for executing tricks adds another wrinkle, though opinions are split on whether it enhances or just interrupts the flow of racing. The AI in career mode apparently provides a genuine challenge in later seasons, which is more than you can say for a lot of budget racers. The Steam community sits at a "Mixed" rating, roughly split 50-50, which tells you everything you need to know: this is a game that works for some and actively frustrates others depending on tolerance for loose physics. The online population is essentially zero at this point. If you are coming here for competitive PvP lobbies, that ship has long sailed. The local multiplayer and solo career are the only realistic reasons to load this up in 2025. Performance is reportedly smooth, which is about the nicest technical compliment you can reliably give it. Anyone chasing ATV Offroad Fury nostalgia will likely walk away disappointed. Anyone with low expectations who just wants a short-session couch racer with a friend might scrape some value out of it, but there are better budget options in the genre. Fred, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7/8/10
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 11
- Storage
- 12 GB available space
- Graphics
- 1GB
- Processor
- Intel Core 2 Duo CPU E6550 2.33GHz
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- Artefacts Studio
- Publisher
- Microids
- Release Date
- Nov 14, 2017