Compare Garfield Kart 2 - All You Can Drift prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Eden Games. Published by Microids. Released on 9/10/2025. Available on PC. Genres: Racing, Sports.

Garfield and friends pile into karts for a ride that looks the part but arrives thin on content and missing basic features that even budget racers nail as standard.

I organize Saturday night couch tournaments for a living, so trust me when I say the first question I ask about any kart racer is: can four people jump in, pick a character, and start laughing within two minutes? Garfield Kart 2 - All You Can Drift almost gets there, and that gap between almost and yes is frustratingly wide. The setup is pure kart-racer basics. Eight characters drawn from Garfield's comic-strip universe, each slotted into light, medium, or heavy weight classes that nudge their acceleration and top speed in familiar ways. Garfield and Odie land in medium, Nermal goes light, Jon Arbuckle and Dr. Liz Wilson ride heavy. You customize bumpers, wheels, spoilers, and paint jobs before hitting one of twelve tracks spread across three Grand Prix cups. The three worlds, a detective city, pirate seas, and a Wild West rodeo, look cheerful and cel-shaded in a comic-strip style that genuinely suits the license. The soundtrack is a pleasant surprise, with several tracks delivering energetic, well-produced music. Item chaos, rockets, pies, and springboards, keeps races lively in the back half of the pack. Three speed classes, 100cc, 150cc, and a mirrored mode, round out the package. On paper: fine. In practice: the cracks show fast. The drift mechanic, which is supposedly the whole point given the title, works well enough when the controls cooperate, but player feedback at launch called out slippery handling that only gets worse at higher speed classes. More damaging for my crew: there are no button-remapping options and no volume slider in the settings menu, an extraordinary omission for a 2025 retail release. The AI leans aggressive and rubberbands hard, which can flip you from second to last in a single item barrage with no realistic route back before the finish line. And while local split-screen for four players is present and functional, the online side is a mess: you cannot create a private lobby to race with friends remotely, only random public matchmaking, and what little online population exists has been thinning since launch with no post-release updates to address it. The content ceiling is low. Twelve tracks is lean even for a budget kart racer, and completing all three Grand Prix cups plus unlocking customization parts can be done in a single sitting. Dedicated fans of Garfield: Furious Racing will find this sequel strips away some of the predecessor's personality in a clear bid to mirror Mario Kart 8 Deluxe, down to kart animations, power-up behavior, and circuit obstacle design. Critics have noted the similarities are hard to ignore. There are no battle arenas, no team modes, and no seasonal content on the roadmap that anyone can confirm is coming. For a four-friends couch session it works for a couple of hours, especially with younger players who will not care about the rough edges. For anyone expecting a feature-complete package, the gaps add up. Botton line: local split-screen saves it from being a total write-off, but missing private online lobbies, locked controls, and only twelve tracks make this hard to recommend unless you specifically need a family-friendly couch racer with Garfield's face on it. Hold out for a significant discount before pulling the trigger. Riley, Scout Team

Garfield Kart 2 - All You Can Drift
RacingSports

Garfield Kart 2 - All You Can Drift

Sep 10, 2025Eden GamesMicroids
GamerScout Says

Garfield and friends pile into karts for a ride that looks the part but arrives thin on content and missing basic features that even budget racers nail as standard.

PC
Best Price Available
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Historical low: $11.27

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Screenshots & Media

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About Garfield Kart 2 - All You Can Drift

I organize Saturday night couch tournaments for a living, so trust me when I say the first question I ask about any kart racer is: can four people jump in, pick a character, and start laughing within two minutes? Garfield Kart 2 - All You Can Drift almost gets there, and that gap between almost and yes is frustratingly wide. The setup is pure kart-racer basics. Eight characters drawn from Garfield's comic-strip universe, each slotted into light, medium, or heavy weight classes that nudge their acceleration and top speed in familiar ways. Garfield and Odie land in medium, Nermal goes light, Jon Arbuckle and Dr. Liz Wilson ride heavy. You customize bumpers, wheels, spoilers, and paint jobs before hitting one of twelve tracks spread across three Grand Prix cups. The three worlds, a detective city, pirate seas, and a Wild West rodeo, look cheerful and cel-shaded in a comic-strip style that genuinely suits the license. The soundtrack is a pleasant surprise, with several tracks delivering energetic, well-produced music. Item chaos, rockets, pies, and springboards, keeps races lively in the back half of the pack. Three speed classes, 100cc, 150cc, and a mirrored mode, round out the package. On paper: fine. In practice: the cracks show fast. The drift mechanic, which is supposedly the whole point given the title, works well enough when the controls cooperate, but player feedback at launch called out slippery handling that only gets worse at higher speed classes. More damaging for my crew: there are no button-remapping options and no volume slider in the settings menu, an extraordinary omission for a 2025 retail release. The AI leans aggressive and rubberbands hard, which can flip you from second to last in a single item barrage with no realistic route back before the finish line. And while local split-screen for four players is present and functional, the online side is a mess: you cannot create a private lobby to race with friends remotely, only random public matchmaking, and what little online population exists has been thinning since launch with no post-release updates to address it. The content ceiling is low. Twelve tracks is lean even for a budget kart racer, and completing all three Grand Prix cups plus unlocking customization parts can be done in a single sitting. Dedicated fans of Garfield: Furious Racing will find this sequel strips away some of the predecessor's personality in a clear bid to mirror Mario Kart 8 Deluxe, down to kart animations, power-up behavior, and circuit obstacle design. Critics have noted the similarities are hard to ignore. There are no battle arenas, no team modes, and no seasonal content on the roadmap that anyone can confirm is coming. For a four-friends couch session it works for a couple of hours, especially with younger players who will not care about the rough edges. For anyone expecting a feature-complete package, the gaps add up. Botton line: local split-screen saves it from being a total write-off, but missing private online lobbies, locked controls, and only twelve tracks make this hard to recommend unless you specifically need a family-friendly couch racer with Garfield's face on it. Hold out for a significant discount before pulling the trigger. Riley, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvplocal-multiplayerlocal-coopcross-platformachievementstrading-cardscloud-savestier:indieWeight ClassesDrift Mechanics4-Player Split-ScreenComic-Strip AestheticCross-Platform OnlineItem CombatGrand Prix CupsKart Customization

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck UnsupportedProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 5 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 64 bits
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Storage
5 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050Ti
Processor
Intel Core i5 / AMD Ryzen 5 2600

Recommended

OS
Windows 10/11 64 bits
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 12
Storage
5 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA Geforce RTX3060 / Radeon RX 6600
Processor
Intel core i5 9600 / AMD Ryzen 5 3600

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
Eden Games
Publisher
Microids
Release Date
Sep 10, 2025

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Price History

2026-06-1011.27(lowest)

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Garfield Kart 2 - All You Can Drift is available on PC.

When was Garfield Kart 2 - All You Can Drift released?

Garfield Kart 2 - All You Can Drift was released on 10 September 2025.

Who developed Garfield Kart 2 - All You Can Drift?

Garfield Kart 2 - All You Can Drift was developed by Eden Games and published by Microids.