Compare BeamNG.drive prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by BeamNG. Published by BeamNG. Released on 5/29/2015. Available on PC. Genres: Racing, Simulation, Early Access.

The most convincing crash simulator ever made doubles as a surprisingly deep sandbox racer - if your PC can handle the physics bill.

My first hour with BeamNG.drive was spent driving a pickup truck off a highway overpass in slow motion, watching the cab crumple in real time while a door pinged across the tarmac. That is not a complaint. That is the core pitch, and it is genuinely unlike anything else on PC right now. At its heart this is a soft-body physics sandbox built around a roster of fictional-but-familiar vehicles: compact hatchbacks like the Ibishu Covet, chunky pickup trucks from the Gavril D-Series line, buses, vans, a scooter called the Ibishu Pigeon that has developed its own cult fanbase. Every panel, axle, and suspension component is simulated individually, which means crashes look and feel different every single time. You are not watching a pre-baked animation. You are watching physics actually happen. After a decade in Early Access the vehicle count has grown to dozens, each fully tweakable down to tyre pressure and engine tune. Wheels, suspension geometry, and engine configurations are all under your control, which gives it real depth for people who want to build rather than just destroy. Structured play comes through scenarios - truck delivery runs, police pursuits, time trials across the game's twelve open environments - but the honest truth is that most players spend the bulk of their time in free roam, spawning cars on the Italian coastal map or the desert highways of Utah and just experimenting. The built-in World Editor lets you build custom scenarios from scratch, and a massive modding community keeps feeding the game new vehicles, maps, and gameplay setups. The mod ecosystem is genuinely one of the best arguments for buying in; user-created content ranges from replica real-world cars to full racing circuits. Now for the hardware chat, because I have to be straight with you. BeamNG.drive is CPU-hungry in a way that will surprise newcomers. Running multiple vehicles simultaneously with full soft-body simulation taxes even modern processors, so do not expect smooth framerates on older rigs when you have ten cars piled up at the bottom of a hill. A gamepad is recommended and works well, but a steering wheel with force feedback elevates the driving feel considerably - the physics fidelity is high enough that a decent wheel actually tells you things a pad cannot. On the multiplayer front: official online play is confirmed in development but not yet live. The community-built BeamMP mod fills the gap and has over two thousand active players on public servers, though syncing soft-body damage between clients remains imperfect and server performance can wobble on busy lobbies. If you are buying this primarily to cruise with friends right now, manage expectations - it works, but it is not polished co-op. Solo or with one friend using Remote Play Together, though? Enormous fun. BeamNG.drive is still technically in Early Access after a decade, which feels almost academic at this point given the content volume and the developer's consistent update cadence. A PS5 release is also reportedly on the way, which signals the team is thinking bigger. Right now it is PC-only, and it belongs on your drive if you have any affection for cars, physics, or just breaking things in creative ways. Riley, Scout Team

BeamNG.drive
RacingSimulationEarly Access

BeamNG.drive

May 29, 2015BeamNG
GamerScout Says

The most convincing crash simulator ever made doubles as a surprisingly deep sandbox racer - if your PC can handle the physics bill.

PC
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Gold
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €6.36

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Screenshots & Media

About BeamNG.drive

My first hour with BeamNG.drive was spent driving a pickup truck off a highway overpass in slow motion, watching the cab crumple in real time while a door pinged across the tarmac. That is not a complaint. That is the core pitch, and it is genuinely unlike anything else on PC right now. At its heart this is a soft-body physics sandbox built around a roster of fictional-but-familiar vehicles: compact hatchbacks like the Ibishu Covet, chunky pickup trucks from the Gavril D-Series line, buses, vans, a scooter called the Ibishu Pigeon that has developed its own cult fanbase. Every panel, axle, and suspension component is simulated individually, which means crashes look and feel different every single time. You are not watching a pre-baked animation. You are watching physics actually happen. After a decade in Early Access the vehicle count has grown to dozens, each fully tweakable down to tyre pressure and engine tune. Wheels, suspension geometry, and engine configurations are all under your control, which gives it real depth for people who want to build rather than just destroy. Structured play comes through scenarios - truck delivery runs, police pursuits, time trials across the game's twelve open environments - but the honest truth is that most players spend the bulk of their time in free roam, spawning cars on the Italian coastal map or the desert highways of Utah and just experimenting. The built-in World Editor lets you build custom scenarios from scratch, and a massive modding community keeps feeding the game new vehicles, maps, and gameplay setups. The mod ecosystem is genuinely one of the best arguments for buying in; user-created content ranges from replica real-world cars to full racing circuits. Now for the hardware chat, because I have to be straight with you. BeamNG.drive is CPU-hungry in a way that will surprise newcomers. Running multiple vehicles simultaneously with full soft-body simulation taxes even modern processors, so do not expect smooth framerates on older rigs when you have ten cars piled up at the bottom of a hill. A gamepad is recommended and works well, but a steering wheel with force feedback elevates the driving feel considerably - the physics fidelity is high enough that a decent wheel actually tells you things a pad cannot. On the multiplayer front: official online play is confirmed in development but not yet live. The community-built BeamMP mod fills the gap and has over two thousand active players on public servers, though syncing soft-body damage between clients remains imperfect and server performance can wobble on busy lobbies. If you are buying this primarily to cruise with friends right now, manage expectations - it works, but it is not polished co-op. Solo or with one friend using Remote Play Together, though? Enormous fun. BeamNG.drive is still technically in Early Access after a decade, which feels almost academic at this point given the content volume and the developer's consistent update cadence. A PS5 release is also reportedly on the way, which signals the team is thinking bigger. Right now it is PC-only, and it belongs on your drive if you have any affection for cars, physics, or just breaking things in creative ways.

Riley
Riley · Scout Team

Sports & racing

Tags

Single-playerSteam AchievementsSteam Trading CardsCamera ComfortCustom Volume ControlsKeyboard Only OptionStereo SoundSurround SoundPartial Controller SupportSteam CloudIncludes level editorRemote Play on PhoneRemote Play on TabletRemote Play TogetherFamily SharingSoft-Body PhysicsCrash SandboxMod EcosystemSteering Wheel SupportFree RoamVehicle CustomisationBeamMP MultiplayerScenario Editor

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
Dual-core processor
Memory
2 GB RAM
Graphics
Dedicated graphics card
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Network
Broadband Internet connection Hard Drive: 4 GB available space

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 64 Bit
Processor
AMD Ryzen 7 3700X / Intel Core i7 9700
Memory
32 GB RAM
Graphics
Minimum 8GB VRAM (AMD RX 6700 / Nvidia GeForce RTX 30…

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Game Info

Developer
BeamNG
Publisher
BeamNG
Release Date
May 29, 2015

Game Modes

singleplayer

Languages

Subtitles (13)
EnglishFrenchJapaneseKoreanPortuguese - PortugalPortuguese - Brazil+7 more

Features

AchievementsCloud Saves

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Frequently asked questions about BeamNG.drive

How much does BeamNG.drive cost?

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What platforms is BeamNG.drive available on?

BeamNG.drive is available on PC.

When was BeamNG.drive released?

BeamNG.drive was released on 29 May 2015.

Who developed BeamNG.drive?

BeamNG.drive was developed by BeamNG.