Compare Motor Mash prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Ocean Software. Published by Piko Interactive. Released on 8/7/2020. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Racing.

A 1997 PS1 party racer re-released on PC with zero modernisation. Fine for nostalgia-fuelled couch chaos, a bad deal for anyone expecting a functional modern product.

I'll be straight with you: Motor Mash is a late-90s PlayStation top-down vehicular brawler that arrived on PC via emulation wrapper, not a remaster, not a port, not anything rebuilt for current hardware. The game itself was developed by Eutechnyx, shipped by Ocean Software in 1997, and what you're getting today on Steam is that exact relic running inside Mednafen under a GPL license. No widescreen support, no resolution scaling for modern monitors, no quality-of-life updates. If you're sitting in front of a 1440p or 4K display hoping to get comfortable, you won't. The core loop has a genuine hook, though. Motor Mash is an elimination-style combat racer viewed from above, where the objective is not to cross a finish line first but to shove opponents off-screen until their credits run out and they're eliminated. The knockout mode specifically rewards controlled aggression over pure speed, which gives it a frantic energy that straight racing games rarely achieve. You pick from 12 characters - among them a cabbie, a gangster in a lowrider, a diva in a pink convertible, and a soldier in a tank - but the character choice is cosmetic only. Under the hood, every vehicle handles identically, which kills any meaningful meta. The six themed worlds (Amazon, Wild West, Nightmare, City, Arctic, Atlantic) each carry eight tracks with environmental hazards baked into the layouts: trains cutting across Wild West roads, killer plants dragging cars into pits in the Nightmare zone, a giant ape wandering the City stages. On paper, that sounds lively. In practice, some of those hazards feel more random than tactical, and the AI swings wildly between embarrassingly passive and cheaply perfect with no middle ground. The six modes - single race, practice, knockout, league, team play, and beat-the-clock - give solo players something to do, but the single-player experience is thin at best. The real argument for Motor Mash has always been local multiplayer with three other people crammed onto a couch, and that argument still technically holds if you can get four people in a room and tolerate the visual fidelity of a mid-budget PS1 title running in a windowed box. Online multiplayer is not a factor here, so cross that off your list entirely if that's what you're hoping for. The performance and technical state are where my patience runs out. The Steam community's all-time peak player count is reportedly in single digits. That's not a hype problem, that's a product problem. The controls feel slippery in a way that's hard to attribute purely to the era - cars slide around tracks with inconsistent grip, and the camera occasionally lets track objects block your sightline at the worst moments. Community reception has been consistently negative on modern platforms, citing the complete absence of technical updates alongside the price point for what amounts to abandonware running through an open-source emulator. If you have a specific memory of playing this on PS1 in 1997 and you want to sit four friends around a TV for twenty minutes of chaotic nostalgia, Motor Mash can scratch that itch in a narrow, low-expectations context. If you're here because you want a fun local combat racer right now, Micro Machines World Series, Trailblazers, or even older titles with actual PC ports will serve you better. Motor Mash is a time capsule that Piko Interactive chose not to restore before putting on display. Fred, Scout Team

Motor Mash
ActionRacing

Motor Mash

Aug 7, 2020Ocean SoftwarePiko Interactive
GamerScout Says

A 1997 PS1 party racer re-released on PC with zero modernisation. Fine for nostalgia-fuelled couch chaos, a bad deal for anyone expecting a functional modern product.

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About Motor Mash

I'll be straight with you: Motor Mash is a late-90s PlayStation top-down vehicular brawler that arrived on PC via emulation wrapper, not a remaster, not a port, not anything rebuilt for current hardware. The game itself was developed by Eutechnyx, shipped by Ocean Software in 1997, and what you're getting today on Steam is that exact relic running inside Mednafen under a GPL license. No widescreen support, no resolution scaling for modern monitors, no quality-of-life updates. If you're sitting in front of a 1440p or 4K display hoping to get comfortable, you won't. The core loop has a genuine hook, though. Motor Mash is an elimination-style combat racer viewed from above, where the objective is not to cross a finish line first but to shove opponents off-screen until their credits run out and they're eliminated. The knockout mode specifically rewards controlled aggression over pure speed, which gives it a frantic energy that straight racing games rarely achieve. You pick from 12 characters - among them a cabbie, a gangster in a lowrider, a diva in a pink convertible, and a soldier in a tank - but the character choice is cosmetic only. Under the hood, every vehicle handles identically, which kills any meaningful meta. The six themed worlds (Amazon, Wild West, Nightmare, City, Arctic, Atlantic) each carry eight tracks with environmental hazards baked into the layouts: trains cutting across Wild West roads, killer plants dragging cars into pits in the Nightmare zone, a giant ape wandering the City stages. On paper, that sounds lively. In practice, some of those hazards feel more random than tactical, and the AI swings wildly between embarrassingly passive and cheaply perfect with no middle ground. The six modes - single race, practice, knockout, league, team play, and beat-the-clock - give solo players something to do, but the single-player experience is thin at best. The real argument for Motor Mash has always been local multiplayer with three other people crammed onto a couch, and that argument still technically holds if you can get four people in a room and tolerate the visual fidelity of a mid-budget PS1 title running in a windowed box. Online multiplayer is not a factor here, so cross that off your list entirely if that's what you're hoping for. The performance and technical state are where my patience runs out. The Steam community's all-time peak player count is reportedly in single digits. That's not a hype problem, that's a product problem. The controls feel slippery in a way that's hard to attribute purely to the era - cars slide around tracks with inconsistent grip, and the camera occasionally lets track objects block your sightline at the worst moments. Community reception has been consistently negative on modern platforms, citing the complete absence of technical updates alongside the price point for what amounts to abandonware running through an open-source emulator. If you have a specific memory of playing this on PS1 in 1997 and you want to sit four friends around a TV for twenty minutes of chaotic nostalgia, Motor Mash can scratch that itch in a narrow, low-expectations context. If you're here because you want a fun local combat racer right now, Micro Machines World Series, Trailblazers, or even older titles with actual PC ports will serve you better. Motor Mash is a time capsule that Piko Interactive chose not to restore before putting on display. Fred, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerpvplocal-multiplayercooplocal-cooptier:indieCombat RacingTop-Down RacerElimination ModeCouch MultiplayerEmulated PortVehicular CombatParty Racing

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 / 8.1 / 10
Memory
512 MB RAM
Graphics
256 Mb or more
Processor
Intel Celeron or greater

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Ocean Software
Publisher
Piko Interactive
Release Date
Aug 7, 2020

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