
Crazy Buggy Racing
Skip this one unless you have a deep love for chaotic physics and a Steam trading card collection to fill. The wheels barely touch the ground, and not in a fun way.
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About Crazy Buggy Racing
I went in hoping for a scrappy, low-budget off-road racer with some guilty-pleasure charm. What I got was a singleplayer-only buggy game that fights you at every turn, and not in the entertaining way. The core loop puts you behind the wheel of a single vehicle across environments spanning desert tracks, snowy peaks, jungle paths, and city streets, with coin collecting and object destruction thrown in as secondary objectives. On paper that sounds like a breezy, accessible arcade racer. In practice, the physics engine is the main character, and it has terrible ideas. The handling is where things fall apart fastest. Players across the Steam community consistently report that the car steers like it is dragging an anchor, drifts unpredictably after cornering, and becomes genuinely unstable at higher speeds. Hit a small incline at pace and you are likely launching into the air and spinning out before landing upside down. The game includes environmental props you are encouraged to smash through, but colliding with many of them simply kills your momentum or sends you pinwheeling across the level. Trampolines and rooftop sections are present as course features, and the idea is fine, but the execution is let down by physics that feel like a Unreal Engine 4 prototype someone shipped without further iteration. From a sports and racing accessibility standpoint, there is nothing here to recommend. No multiplayer, no split-screen, no co-op, no competitive modes. Wheel and gamepad support is not documented, and based on community reports, even basic keyboard controls feel slippery and unresponsive. This is a strictly solo experience with no replay hooks to keep you coming back after the first run through each track. The soundtrack, to be fair, is a separate paid DLC featuring trance and breakbeat tracks from Betelgeuze, and the music itself is more competently produced than the game it accompanies. The visuals are passable for a budget release, but the menus and overall UI polish lag well behind even the low bar set by comparable micro-budget titles. If you are hunting for a chaotic, casual buggy racer to play alone and you genuinely enjoy watching your vehicle catapult into the sky off a cactus, there is a narrow slice of novelty here. But with no competitive element, broken-feeling physics, a single driveable car, and community reception sitting well below the halfway mark, there is no practical case for prioritising this over anything else in the genre. Save your Saturday night session for something that actually works with four people on the couch. Riley, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7, 8, 10 64 bit
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 12
- Storage
- 3 GB available space
- Graphics
- Nvidia GTX 1050 TI
- Processor
- core i3 6100
- Sound Card
- The sound device compatible with DirectX® 9
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Game Info
- Developer
- VGstudio
- Publisher
- VGstudio
- Release Date
- Apr 12, 2017


