Monster Jam Steel Titans key
Grave Digger fans will find a decent sandbox to stomp around in, but anyone expecting a polished racing package will be left cold by the twitchy physics and missing multiplayer.
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About Monster Jam Steel Titans key
My first reaction booting up Monster Jam Steel Titans was genuine excitement: Rainbow Studios built their reputation on the MX vs. ATV series, so a monster truck game from the same house should, in theory, handle the off-road mayhem well. The reality lands somewhere between 'passable kid-pleaser' and 'missed opportunity,' and where you fall on that spectrum depends almost entirely on how much you already love the Monster Jam brand. The mode list is wider than you might expect. Career runs you through six series that mix outdoor waypoint races, head-to-head circuits, arena freestyle events, two-wheel skill challenges, and timed destruction. Quick Play lets you set up standalone sessions across those same event types, and there is a free-roam open world that grows as you progress through championships, dotted with collectibles and stunt opportunities. The roster goes up to 25 licensed trucks at launch, including series staples like Grave Digger and Max-D, with each truck beautifully rendered and some carrying alternate paint schemes. A post-launch update added a Career+ mode and new open-world challenges that unlock additional content, so the game received at least some support after release. On the hardware side, the Steam community forum confirms support for popular Thrustmaster and Logitech wheel peripherals, which is welcome, though the game is accessible enough on a standard gamepad that wheel users are probably chasing immersion more than competitive advantage. Here is where things get complicated. The physics engine tries to straddle arcade and simulation and mostly falls between both stools. Trucks feel weightless on the flat, prone to flipping from minor contact, while lacking the satisfying feedback of tires actually biting into dirt. The freestyle and two-wheel skill events are the career's most common event type, yet the tutorials barely explain how to chain tricks effectively, leaving players to figure it out through trial and error mid-competition. The AI is passive to the point of being decorative in race modes, which would be forgivable if there were online play to fill the gap. There is no online multiplayer at all. The PC version also launched with notable framerate dips when multiple trucks are onscreen simultaneously. The career itself, if you push through it, runs around six to ten hours depending on retries, and the open world, while a nice idea, feels underpopulated and bland in its environmental detail. The question I always ask for group play is blunt: is it fun for four people squeezed on a couch? The honest answer is no, and not because the concept is wrong. The concept of monster trucks smashing through arenas is inherently hilarious group-watch material. But the PC version ships without split-screen, and without online, you are handing the controller around solo-style, which kills momentum fast. If you have a kid who is obsessed with Grave Digger or Monster Mutt, this is probably the best official Monster Jam game available for that child, and parent-on-sofa watching mode absolutely works. For anyone else, the twitchy handling, shallow career, and absent multiplayer make it a hard sell at anything above a steep discount. Riley, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Rainbow Studios
- Publisher
- THQ Nordic
- Release Date
- Jun 25, 2019
