Compare MotoGP™25 prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Milestone S.r.l.. Published by Milestone S.r.l.. Released on 4/30/2025. Available on PC, Xbox, Nintendo Switch. Genres: Racing, Simulation, Sports.

The most approachable MotoGP yet, but veterans who skipped MotoGP 24 will get far more out of it than annual upgraders. Arcade mode is genuinely good fun; Pro mode will humble you fast.

I've spent enough Saturday nights with a controller in hand trying to keep a virtual superbike upright to know that the MotoGP series has historically been a wall of tarmac for anyone who doesn't eat lap-time spreadsheets for breakfast. So the single biggest thing worth knowing about MotoGP 25 is that Milestone finally added a proper Arcade Experience that sits alongside the existing Pro Experience sim mode. Arcade here is not a condescending 'baby mode' - reviewers who went in skeptical came out impressed, describing it as feeling like you have an incredible set of tires fitted rather than like the bike is riding itself. You can still dive down the inside, brake late into the apex, and feel genuine speed. Flip over to Pro and it's a completely different animal: tire management, fuel consumption, electronics tuning, and dedicated engineer debriefs to shape your Bike Development System across the season. Both modes are legitimate, and that dual-track structure is the smartest thing Milestone has done with this series in years. The career mode is the main event for solo players. You pick your entry point - Moto3, Moto2, or straight into the premier MotoGP class - and work through a season shaped by a new Turning Points system where your goals and rivalries shift depending on the path you choose. Building social relationships with other riders, managing the Riders Market to angle for a better team contract, and responding to post-race social media callouts from rivals all add texture beyond just race-weekend loops. The catch, and it's a real one, is that the career presentation is almost entirely text-based - no voice acting anywhere in the mode. For a AAA sports sim in 2025, that makes paddock life feel like reading a team memo rather than living in the sport. The brand-new Race Off mode drops you onto dedicated tracks in Tuscany and the French Alps to train on Motards, Flat Track bikes, and Minibikes between race weekends. It sounds weird on paper - and some reviewers said as much - but in practice the Minibike and Motard disciplines are a genuinely fun change of pace, and completing them feeds back into your rider's physical stats and paddock relationships inside career mode. New tracks on the 2025 calendar include Balaton Park in Hungary and the returning Brno circuit in the Czech Republic. On the AI front, opponents now adapt to your racing style rather than rubber-banding into your bumper, and the result is races that feel competitive without being dishonest. For the couch-multiplayer crowd: local split-screen is confirmed for two players, and crossplay online works across PC and console from day one - including Ranked races and the LiveGP Championship. That said, multiple reviewers flagged that online lobbies were thinly populated post-launch, so ranked matchmaking may test your patience depending on when you jump in. On PC the game runs on Unreal Engine 5 and looks strong in motion, though trackside scenery and NPC detail have drawn criticism for lagging behind the quality of the bike models themselves. Steam user sentiment currently sits around 73 percent positive across several hundred reviews, which puts it firmly in 'good, not great' territory. If you already own MotoGP 24 and were mostly happy with it, the upgrade case is thin. If you're new to the series or skipped a cycle, the Arcade mode and Race Off content make this the easiest entry point the franchise has ever had. Riley, Scout Team

MotoGP™25
RacingSimulationSports

MotoGP™25

Apr 30, 2025Milestone S.r.l.
GamerScout Says

The most approachable MotoGP yet, but veterans who skipped MotoGP 24 will get far more out of it than annual upgraders. Arcade mode is genuinely good fun; Pro mode will humble you fast.

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Screenshots & Media

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About MotoGP™25

I've spent enough Saturday nights with a controller in hand trying to keep a virtual superbike upright to know that the MotoGP series has historically been a wall of tarmac for anyone who doesn't eat lap-time spreadsheets for breakfast. So the single biggest thing worth knowing about MotoGP 25 is that Milestone finally added a proper Arcade Experience that sits alongside the existing Pro Experience sim mode. Arcade here is not a condescending 'baby mode' - reviewers who went in skeptical came out impressed, describing it as feeling like you have an incredible set of tires fitted rather than like the bike is riding itself. You can still dive down the inside, brake late into the apex, and feel genuine speed. Flip over to Pro and it's a completely different animal: tire management, fuel consumption, electronics tuning, and dedicated engineer debriefs to shape your Bike Development System across the season. Both modes are legitimate, and that dual-track structure is the smartest thing Milestone has done with this series in years. The career mode is the main event for solo players. You pick your entry point - Moto3, Moto2, or straight into the premier MotoGP class - and work through a season shaped by a new Turning Points system where your goals and rivalries shift depending on the path you choose. Building social relationships with other riders, managing the Riders Market to angle for a better team contract, and responding to post-race social media callouts from rivals all add texture beyond just race-weekend loops. The catch, and it's a real one, is that the career presentation is almost entirely text-based - no voice acting anywhere in the mode. For a AAA sports sim in 2025, that makes paddock life feel like reading a team memo rather than living in the sport. The brand-new Race Off mode drops you onto dedicated tracks in Tuscany and the French Alps to train on Motards, Flat Track bikes, and Minibikes between race weekends. It sounds weird on paper - and some reviewers said as much - but in practice the Minibike and Motard disciplines are a genuinely fun change of pace, and completing them feeds back into your rider's physical stats and paddock relationships inside career mode. New tracks on the 2025 calendar include Balaton Park in Hungary and the returning Brno circuit in the Czech Republic. On the AI front, opponents now adapt to your racing style rather than rubber-banding into your bumper, and the result is races that feel competitive without being dishonest. For the couch-multiplayer crowd: local split-screen is confirmed for two players, and crossplay online works across PC and console from day one - including Ranked races and the LiveGP Championship. That said, multiple reviewers flagged that online lobbies were thinly populated post-launch, so ranked matchmaking may test your patience depending on when you jump in. On PC the game runs on Unreal Engine 5 and looks strong in motion, though trackside scenery and NPC detail have drawn criticism for lagging behind the quality of the bike models themselves. Steam user sentiment currently sits around 73 percent positive across several hundred reviews, which puts it firmly in 'good, not great' territory. If you already own MotoGP 24 and were mostly happy with it, the upgrade case is thin. If you're new to the series or skipped a cycle, the Arcade mode and Race Off content make this the easiest entry point the franchise has ever had. Riley, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvplocal-multiplayerlocal-coopcross-platformachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:aaaBike SimulationArcade-Sim HybridAdaptive AICareer ModeRace Off TrainingCrossplay OnlineTwo-Player Split-ScreenUnreal Engine 5Riders MarketAnnual Sports Sim

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Gold

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 3 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 x64
Memory
12 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
24 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 970 (4096 MB) | Radeon RX 580 (8192 MB)
Processor
Intel Core i5-9600K (6 * 3700) | AMD Ryzen 5 1600 (6 * 3200) or equivalent

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 x64
Memory
16 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
24 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce RTX 2080 (8192 MB) | Radeon RX 5700 (8192 MB)
Processor
Intel Core i9-9900k (8 * 3600) | AMD Ryzen 7 2700X (8 * 3700) or equivalent

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
Milestone S.r.l.
Publisher
Milestone S.r.l.
Release Date
Apr 30, 2025

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Price History

2026-06-1012.04(lowest)

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What platforms is MotoGP™25 available on?

MotoGP™25 is available on PC, Xbox, Nintendo Switch.

When was MotoGP™25 released?

MotoGP™25 was released on 30 April 2025.

Who developed MotoGP™25?

MotoGP™25 was developed by Milestone S.r.l..