Compare Find the Oil Racing Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by new dev. Published by new dev. Released on 4/1/2019. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie, Racing, Simulation, Sports.

Barely half its Steam reviewers recommend it, the exit button reportedly doesn't work, and the whole thing wraps up in an afternoon. Go in eyes open or not at all.

I've seen a lot of budget racers come through the Scout pipeline, but Find the Oil Racing Edition sits in a pretty specific category: the kind of game that exists, that you can technically play, and that will test your patience more than your reflexes. The premise is thin but playable - stolen oil, open map, three vehicles, get moving. You pick between a supercar built for flat-out speed, a 4x4 monster truck that handles the rougher desert and mountain trails, and a sedan sitting somewhere in the middle. Vehicle choice does carry a small layer of strategy since each handles the uneven terrain differently, but don't expect physics depth or tuning menus. The map itself covers desert and mountainous terrain on a single large open-world layout. That sounds generous on paper, but the hilly, bumpy ground is less of a designed challenge and more of a janky obstacle. Community screenshots show vehicles getting wedged on slopes mid-run, which is the kind of friction that kills momentum fast. There are three camera modes available - first-person and third-person among them - which is a genuine plus for accessibility, though no camera option fully papers over the rough terrain geometry. Obstacles and environmental hazards are present, but player reports suggest they lean more toward frustrating than thrilling. Here is the part where I have to be straight with you from a co-op and social gaming standpoint: this is singleplayer only, no split-screen, no multiplayer mode of any kind. If your Saturday night crew is looking for something to play together, this one sits out entirely. Solo, it reads as a short curiosity - the kind of thing you finish in a single session and then wonder briefly why you did. Steam's review pool of 32 voters landed at a mixed 46% positive, which is about as lukewarm as a verdict gets. A community note flagged that the exit button doesn't function, which is the sort of bug that lingers in micro-budget titles and says a lot about post-launch support levels. There is an audience here, but it is narrow. If you grabbed this for free via an Epic giveaway and have an hour to kill with zero expectations, the sheer oddness of the mission framing and the open map give it a mild curiosity factor. Paying meaningful money for it is a harder sell. Wheel and pedal set owners should not bother connecting their hardware for this one - gamepad or keyboard will serve the same function. Newcomers to racing games will not learn anything transferable, and veterans will find nothing to hold interest past the first vehicle swap. Riley, Scout Team

Find the Oil Racing Edition
AdventureCasualIndieRacingSimulationSports

Find the Oil Racing Edition

Apr 1, 2019new dev
GamerScout Says

Barely half its Steam reviewers recommend it, the exit button reportedly doesn't work, and the whole thing wraps up in an afternoon. Go in eyes open or not at all.

PC
Best Price Available
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Historical low: $1.02

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Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Find the Oil Racing Edition

I've seen a lot of budget racers come through the Scout pipeline, but Find the Oil Racing Edition sits in a pretty specific category: the kind of game that exists, that you can technically play, and that will test your patience more than your reflexes. The premise is thin but playable - stolen oil, open map, three vehicles, get moving. You pick between a supercar built for flat-out speed, a 4x4 monster truck that handles the rougher desert and mountain trails, and a sedan sitting somewhere in the middle. Vehicle choice does carry a small layer of strategy since each handles the uneven terrain differently, but don't expect physics depth or tuning menus. The map itself covers desert and mountainous terrain on a single large open-world layout. That sounds generous on paper, but the hilly, bumpy ground is less of a designed challenge and more of a janky obstacle. Community screenshots show vehicles getting wedged on slopes mid-run, which is the kind of friction that kills momentum fast. There are three camera modes available - first-person and third-person among them - which is a genuine plus for accessibility, though no camera option fully papers over the rough terrain geometry. Obstacles and environmental hazards are present, but player reports suggest they lean more toward frustrating than thrilling. Here is the part where I have to be straight with you from a co-op and social gaming standpoint: this is singleplayer only, no split-screen, no multiplayer mode of any kind. If your Saturday night crew is looking for something to play together, this one sits out entirely. Solo, it reads as a short curiosity - the kind of thing you finish in a single session and then wonder briefly why you did. Steam's review pool of 32 voters landed at a mixed 46% positive, which is about as lukewarm as a verdict gets. A community note flagged that the exit button doesn't function, which is the sort of bug that lingers in micro-budget titles and says a lot about post-launch support levels. There is an audience here, but it is narrow. If you grabbed this for free via an Epic giveaway and have an hour to kill with zero expectations, the sheer oddness of the mission framing and the open map give it a mild curiosity factor. Paying meaningful money for it is a harder sell. Wheel and pedal set owners should not bother connecting their hardware for this one - gamepad or keyboard will serve the same function. Newcomers to racing games will not learn anything transferable, and veterans will find nothing to hold interest past the first vehicle swap. Riley, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertier:sub-5Open-World DrivingMission-Based RacingVehicle SelectionTerrain ExplorationSingle SessionBudget RacerNo MultiplayerController SupportFirst-Person Camera

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 x64
Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
GT 630
Processor
Intel Dual Core

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 x64
Memory
4 GB RAM
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
GTX 660
Processor
Intel i5

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Game Info

Developer
new dev
Publisher
new dev
Release Date
Apr 1, 2019

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Price History

2026-06-101.02(lowest)

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What platforms is Find the Oil Racing Edition available on?

Find the Oil Racing Edition is available on PC.

When was Find the Oil Racing Edition released?

Find the Oil Racing Edition was released on 1 April 2019.

Who developed Find the Oil Racing Edition?

Find the Oil Racing Edition was developed by new dev.