Disney Pixar Cars: Mater-National Championship
Pure nostalgic comfort racing for Cars fans of any age, with enough event variety to keep kids busy and adults surprisingly hooked for a few evenings.
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About Disney Pixar Cars: Mater-National Championship
My Saturday co-op radar lit up the moment I saw 91% positive Steam reviews on a licensed kids racer from 2007. That number is not an accident. Mater-National Championship is the kind of game that earns goodwill by simply knowing its lane and staying in it. It is an accessible, arcade-style kart-adjacent racer built around the Cars movie world, and it delivers exactly what it promises: colourful tracks, familiar characters, and a steady rhythm of short, punchy events that work great for younger players or anyone who just wants to switch the brain off and lap Ornament Valley a few times. The event variety is where this one earns its keep. Rather than a single race type repeated until you tap out, the game rotates between Road Races, Stadium Races, Rustbucket demolition derbies, and Monster Truck Waypoint Races where you hit checkpoints while battling opponents. Luigi and Guido's Team Relay mode adds a relay format where you hand off between two cars mid-race, which breaks the rhythm nicely. Minigames round the card out, including the fan-favourite Tractor Tipping, where you sneak around tipping cattle-car tractors while dodging Frank. It is silly, it controls well in that section, and it is genuinely the highlight of the lighter content. With 68 total events across Story and Arcade modes and unlockable characters and paint jobs bought with earned Bonus Points, there is a reasonable amount to chase for completionist kids. For the adults in the room, be straight with yourself. The AI is not aggressive. On default difficulty, opponents fold without putting up much of a fight, and the main Story mode can be cleared in a single sitting if you push it. Replayability largely depends on whether you or your child want to grind Bonus Points for the full roster of 17 playable characters, including the five unlockable internationals like Giovanni (Italy), Koji (Japan), Emma (UK), and Otto (Germany). The PC version also has an active modding scene, with community mods that expand the character roster significantly and even port visual improvements from the PS3 version, which is a surprisingly lively support base for a game this age. On the hardware side, the controls are designed around a gamepad and feel right at home on one. Forget your wheel and pedal rig for this one. Racing wheels are overkill and the simplified steering model would feel odd at that fidelity anyway. Two players on one PC with a pair of controllers is the sweet spot. The game runs cleanly on modern hardware at solid frame rates, so there are no compatibility horror stories to worry about. Split-screen is present for local co-op, which means it absolutely qualifies under the "fun for people on the couch" test. Will four drunk adults lose their minds over it? Probably not. But two kids and a parent who grew up watching the films? That Saturday afternoon is sorted. Riley, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Rainbow Studios
- Publisher
- Disney Interactive Studios
- Release Date
- Feb 24, 2015
