Compare Extreme Offroad Monster Simulator prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by A Nostru. Published by My Way Games. Released on 10/29/2019. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie, Racing, Simulation, Sports.

Monster trucks, open hills, and a police chase mode sound like a Saturday night. The execution, however, lands closer to a phone port than a PC racer.

I want to like a monster truck game with Career, Challenge, and Offroad modes and a police escape mechanic thrown in for chaos. That premise practically writes the Saturday night session on its own. Extreme Offroad Monster Simulator, released in late 2019 by A Nostru, pitches exactly that fantasy: big 4x4 trucks, hilly American countryside, jumps, stunts, and head-to-head racing. Then you fire it up and the gap between pitch and product becomes very hard to ignore. The three modes give the impression of structure. Career offers a progression loop of races across marked courses, Offroad lets you roam the open terrain, and Challenge throws obstacle-style tasks at you. The routes are defined by coloured markers, and drifting outside them will trigger a reset, which is a design choice that sits awkwardly in a game advertising free-roaming monster truck mayhem. The countryside setting does produce some satisfying air time over hills, and for about twenty minutes that core loop of catching jumps holds a simple appeal. The problems pile up quickly after those first twenty minutes. The game engine has been widely flagged by players as unreliable, with AI opponents clipping into track-side objects rather than racing cleanly. Visuals sit at a level that is generously described as mobile-grade, and the object-culling behaviour that keeps framerates manageable underlines how close this sits to a phone title rather than a proper PC release. Partial controller support is listed, but with no split-screen and no local multiplayer of any kind, the "fun for four friends" test is an automatic fail here. Remote Play Together technically exists as a Steam feature, but asking a group to stream this particular experience is a hard sell. The police-chase element is genuinely the most interesting wrinkle in the package. It injects a little urgency and unpredictability into what is otherwise a very plain race structure. If the developer had leaned into that mode harder and polished the vehicle handling around it, there would be something worth recommending. As it stands, the handling is floaty in a way that never resolves into satisfying control, steering input feeling disconnected from what the truck actually does on terrain. For casual players or younger kids who just want to watch big trucks bounce over hills, there is a base level of spectacle on offer, and the asking price reflects the product tier. For anyone expecting a genuine monster truck sim, or even a fun arcadey racer with friends, this misses the mark. The Steam community sits around a coin-flip split on whether it is even worth the entry point, which tells you most of what you need to know. Spend your time elsewhere unless your expectations are set extremely low. Riley, Scout Team

Extreme Offroad Monster Simulator
AdventureCasualIndieRacingSimulationSports

Extreme Offroad Monster Simulator

Oct 29, 2019A NostruMy Way Games
GamerScout Says

Monster trucks, open hills, and a police chase mode sound like a Saturday night. The execution, however, lands closer to a phone port than a PC racer.

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Historical low: $0.24

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About Extreme Offroad Monster Simulator

I want to like a monster truck game with Career, Challenge, and Offroad modes and a police escape mechanic thrown in for chaos. That premise practically writes the Saturday night session on its own. Extreme Offroad Monster Simulator, released in late 2019 by A Nostru, pitches exactly that fantasy: big 4x4 trucks, hilly American countryside, jumps, stunts, and head-to-head racing. Then you fire it up and the gap between pitch and product becomes very hard to ignore. The three modes give the impression of structure. Career offers a progression loop of races across marked courses, Offroad lets you roam the open terrain, and Challenge throws obstacle-style tasks at you. The routes are defined by coloured markers, and drifting outside them will trigger a reset, which is a design choice that sits awkwardly in a game advertising free-roaming monster truck mayhem. The countryside setting does produce some satisfying air time over hills, and for about twenty minutes that core loop of catching jumps holds a simple appeal. The problems pile up quickly after those first twenty minutes. The game engine has been widely flagged by players as unreliable, with AI opponents clipping into track-side objects rather than racing cleanly. Visuals sit at a level that is generously described as mobile-grade, and the object-culling behaviour that keeps framerates manageable underlines how close this sits to a phone title rather than a proper PC release. Partial controller support is listed, but with no split-screen and no local multiplayer of any kind, the "fun for four friends" test is an automatic fail here. Remote Play Together technically exists as a Steam feature, but asking a group to stream this particular experience is a hard sell. The police-chase element is genuinely the most interesting wrinkle in the package. It injects a little urgency and unpredictability into what is otherwise a very plain race structure. If the developer had leaned into that mode harder and polished the vehicle handling around it, there would be something worth recommending. As it stands, the handling is floaty in a way that never resolves into satisfying control, steering input feeling disconnected from what the truck actually does on terrain. For casual players or younger kids who just want to watch big trucks bounce over hills, there is a base level of spectacle on offer, and the asking price reflects the product tier. For anyone expecting a genuine monster truck sim, or even a fun arcadey racer with friends, this misses the mark. The Steam community sits around a coin-flip split on whether it is even worth the entry point, which tells you most of what you need to know. Spend your time elsewhere unless your expectations are set extremely low. Riley, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertier:sub-5Monster TrucksArcade RacerPolice ChaseOpen TerrainController SupportMobile-Port FeelLow System Requirements

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 x64
Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
200 MB available space
Graphics
Intel HD graphics
Processor
Intel Celeron

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 x64
Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
200 MB available space
Graphics
GT 210
Processor
Intel Dual Core

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Game Info

Developer
A Nostru
Publisher
My Way Games
Release Date
Oct 29, 2019

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Price History

2026-06-100.24(lowest)

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How much does Extreme Offroad Monster Simulator cost?

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What platforms is Extreme Offroad Monster Simulator available on?

Extreme Offroad Monster Simulator is available on PC.

When was Extreme Offroad Monster Simulator released?

Extreme Offroad Monster Simulator was released on 29 October 2019.

Who developed Extreme Offroad Monster Simulator?

Extreme Offroad Monster Simulator was developed by A Nostru and published by My Way Games.