Burnout Paradise: The Ultimate Box
Open-world crash-racing chaos across Paradise City, packed with every piece of DLC Criterion shipped at launch. One of the most kinetic arcade racers ever put on PC.
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About Burnout Paradise: The Ultimate Box
Burnout Paradise: The Ultimate Box is Criterion's open-world pivot for the Burnout series, and it remains one of the most purely physical arcade racers ever released on PC. Forget lap circuits and menu-gated events. You pull up to any intersection in Paradise City, hold the triggers, and a race, Road Rage, Stunt Run, Marked Man, or Burning Route event fires off immediately. The city is enormous, load-free once you are inside it, and riddled with shortcuts, 400 crashable billboards, and hidden super-jumps that reward map knowledge. Unlock progression is tied to your Burnout Drivers Licence, which advances as you complete events and wreck rival cars you spot roaming the streets. The three vehicle classes, Stunt, Speed, and Aggression, are not cosmetic choices. Aggression-class heavyweights are the correct pick for Road Rage and Marked Man events, where absorbing impacts and punting opponents into barriers is the entire game. Stunt-class cars handle ramps and drift chains for Stunt Run scoring. Speed-class vehicles exist to cover ground quickly in point-to-point races. The Bikes pack, bundled in from day one on this PC release, adds a day-night cycle and two-wheeled handling that feels distinct enough to be worth switching to. Over 70 vehicles in total means the unlock loop stays busy for a long while. The Ultimate Box bundles content from the Astaire, Bogart, and Cagney updates, which added Stunt Run, Marked Man, and Road Rage to online multiplayer, and also includes the Burnout Party Pack, an offline pass-the-controller mode for up to eight players across Speed, Stunt, and Skill challenge types. The online component, which supported up to eight players with seamless drop-in, was shut down permanently in August 2019. That is a real loss given how well the Freeburn Challenges were designed, but the single-player event pool alone, roughly 120 events plus hundreds of collectibles, keeps the game busy. Just go in knowing multiplayer is gone. The criticism that stuck across reviews at launch was navigation. Paradise City is big enough that the mini-map is often useless mid-race, and switching cars requires physically driving to one of five junkyards rather than pulling up a menu. Both friction points are genuine and have not aged away. The absence of a traditional Crash Mode, replaced here by the Showtime mechanic where you bounce your car down any road for a high score, still divides people who grew up with earlier Burnout titles. Visually the car damage model holds up well, with unique wreck animations and particle effects that were a genuine selling point at the time, even if the city textures show their age next to the later Remastered release. For a numbers-first perspective: this is a game that gets broader with hours in it. The more of Paradise City you memorize, the better your race lines, shortcut reads, and takedown setups become. It is not deep in the way a strategy game is deep, but the skill ceiling for clean runs is real and the variety across five event types prevents any single approach from dominating. If you want an arcade racer with zero pretense of simulation and a city you can genuinely learn, this delivers. Just account for the dead multiplayer and the navigation friction before buying. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- Memory
- 1 GB RAM XP / 1.5 GB Vista
- Storage
- 4 GB
- Graphics
- 128 MB VRAM - Nvidia 6600 / Radeon X1300
- Processor
- 2.8 GHz Pentium 4 XP / 3.2 GHz Pentium 4 Vista
- System requirements
- Windows XP (SP2) / Windows Vista
Recommended
- Memory
- 2 GB RAM
- Storage
- 4 GB
- Graphics
- GeForce 8800 GT
- Processor
- Core 2 Duo E8190 2.66GHz
- System requirements
- Windows XP
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- Criterion Games
- Publisher
- Electronic Arts Inc.
- Release Date
- Feb 3, 2013


