Compare Monster Jam Steel Titans prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Rainbow Studios. Published by THQ Nordic. Released on 6/25/2019. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Casual, Racing, Sports.

If your household has a Grave Digger fan under the age of 12, this is a solid Friday night pick. Everyone else should temper expectations hard before hitting the throttle.

I have sat through enough Saturday night couch sessions to know the difference between a game that sparks genuine chaos and one that fizzles out after two rounds. Monster Jam Steel Titans leans hard toward the latter for most players, but there is a specific audience it quietly nails, and I want to be fair about who that is before piling on. The game covers a lot of ground on paper. Career mode takes you through outdoor circuit races, stadium events, Arena and Stadium Championships, a World Finals bracket, and a handful of stunt disciplines including Freestyle, Two-Wheel Skills, Rhythm races, Waypoint runs, and Timed Destruction. The roster packs 25 officially licensed trucks, with fan favourites like Grave Digger, Megalodon, and Monster Mutt all present. Progression works off earned in-game currency that you spend on Engine, Transmission, Suspension, Tyres, and Chassis upgrades, and a Career+ mode extends the grind for completionists. The open world anchored around Monster Jam University unlocks in chunks as you advance through championships, and it is genuinely decent for free-roaming and hunting collectibles. For a kid or a Monster Jam superfan, that content list reads like a wish list granted. Here is where it gets rocky for everyone else. The physics sit in an uncomfortable middle ground: the trucks carry real weight on straights and need throttle management to stay straight, yet backflips and wild spins execute almost effortlessly. That mix never commits to either arcade fun or simulation depth, and the result is a handling feel that splits critics and players pretty cleanly down monster-truck-fan versus casual-gamer lines. Trucks can also flip unpredictably on terrain that should not cause an issue, which swings from funny the first time to genuinely aggravating by race number ten. Frame rate on PC has historically dipped when multiple trucks share the screen, and pop-in on the open world map is noticeable. There is also no race restart button in career mode, which is a baffling omission. The multiplayer situation is the biggest practical concern for my crowd. Split-screen is capped at two players, accessed through Quick Play rather than career, and requires two separate input devices on PC. There is zero online multiplayer. For a Saturday night with four friends hoping to pile into a monster truck free-for-all, this does not deliver. Two-player couch sessions are genuinely fun in short bursts, especially in the open world and destruction events, but the four-drunk-friends test fails on a technical level. On the hardware side, wheel support is first-player only on PC, so your steering wheel setup will not help your co-pilot. The honest verdict is that Steel Titans is a game that knows exactly one audience and serves them reasonably well: monster truck devotees and younger players who want Grave Digger in their hands without caring about frame rate or physics fidelity. For anyone else, the repetition sets in quickly, the stunt modes lack meaningful tutorialisation, and the missing online component leaves a gap that feels larger the longer you play. Riley, Scout Team

Monster Jam Steel Titans

Monster Jam Steel Titans

Jun 25, 2019Rainbow StudiosTHQ Nordic
GamerScout Says

If your household has a Grave Digger fan under the age of 12, this is a solid Friday night pick. Everyone else should temper expectations hard before hitting the throttle.

PCXbox
Best Price Available
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GamerScout Verdict

Worth it for monster truck fans and younger players; casual or competitive racing fans will outgrow it within a few hours.

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About Monster Jam Steel Titans

I have sat through enough Saturday night couch sessions to know the difference between a game that sparks genuine chaos and one that fizzles out after two rounds. Monster Jam Steel Titans leans hard toward the latter for most players, but there is a specific audience it quietly nails, and I want to be fair about who that is before piling on. The game covers a lot of ground on paper. Career mode takes you through outdoor circuit races, stadium events, Arena and Stadium Championships, a World Finals bracket, and a handful of stunt disciplines including Freestyle, Two-Wheel Skills, Rhythm races, Waypoint runs, and Timed Destruction. The roster packs 25 officially licensed trucks, with fan favourites like Grave Digger, Megalodon, and Monster Mutt all present. Progression works off earned in-game currency that you spend on Engine, Transmission, Suspension, Tyres, and Chassis upgrades, and a Career+ mode extends the grind for completionists. The open world anchored around Monster Jam University unlocks in chunks as you advance through championships, and it is genuinely decent for free-roaming and hunting collectibles. For a kid or a Monster Jam superfan, that content list reads like a wish list granted. Here is where it gets rocky for everyone else. The physics sit in an uncomfortable middle ground: the trucks carry real weight on straights and need throttle management to stay straight, yet backflips and wild spins execute almost effortlessly. That mix never commits to either arcade fun or simulation depth, and the result is a handling feel that splits critics and players pretty cleanly down monster-truck-fan versus casual-gamer lines. Trucks can also flip unpredictably on terrain that should not cause an issue, which swings from funny the first time to genuinely aggravating by race number ten. Frame rate on PC has historically dipped when multiple trucks share the screen, and pop-in on the open world map is noticeable. There is also no race restart button in career mode, which is a baffling omission. The multiplayer situation is the biggest practical concern for my crowd. Split-screen is capped at two players, accessed through Quick Play rather than career, and requires two separate input devices on PC. There is zero online multiplayer. For a Saturday night with four friends hoping to pile into a monster truck free-for-all, this does not deliver. Two-player couch sessions are genuinely fun in short bursts, especially in the open world and destruction events, but the four-drunk-friends test fails on a technical level. On the hardware side, wheel support is first-player only on PC, so your steering wheel setup will not help your co-pilot. The honest verdict is that Steel Titans is a game that knows exactly one audience and serves them reasonably well: monster truck devotees and younger players who want Grave Digger in their hands without caring about frame rate or physics fidelity. For anyone else, the repetition sets in quickly, the stunt modes lack meaningful tutorialisation, and the missing online component leaves a gap that feels larger the longer you play.

Riley
Riley · Scout Team

Sports & racing

Tags

auto-admittedSplit-Screen Co-opStunt EventsOpen World ExplorationLicensed TrucksArcade PhysicsCareer ProgressionDestruction ModeCasual RacingController RequiredKid-Friendly

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
AMD / Intel dual core with 2.5 GHz
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
Intel HD 530 or Geforce GTX 460 or Radeon HD 6670 with 2 GB of VRAM or equivalents
DirectX
Ver…

Recommended

Processor
AMD / Intel Quad Core with 3.0 GHz
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
Geforce GTX 970 or Radeon R9 390 with 4 GB of VRAM or equivalents
DirectX
Version 11 Stor…

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Game Info

Developer
Rainbow Studios
Publisher
THQ Nordic
Release Date
Jun 25, 2019

Features

Single-playerMultiplayerPvPShared/Split Screen PvPCo-opShared/Split Screen Co OpShared/Split ScreenSteam Achievements+5 more

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Frequently asked questions about Monster Jam Steel Titans

How much does Monster Jam Steel Titans cost?

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What platforms is Monster Jam Steel Titans available on?

Monster Jam Steel Titans is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Monster Jam Steel Titans released?

Monster Jam Steel Titans was released on 25 June 2019.

Who developed Monster Jam Steel Titans?

Monster Jam Steel Titans was developed by Rainbow Studios and published by THQ Nordic.