Compare NASCAR Heat 4 - Season Pass (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Monster Games. Published by 704 Games Company. Released on 9/13/2019. Available on PC. Genres: Single Player, Racing.

Four monthly DLC packs bundled into one pass - worth grabbing if you're committed to NH4's career grind and want Jeff Gordon in Quick Race without hunting down each drop separately.

I'll be straight with you: reviewing a Season Pass for a 2019 NASCAR game in 2026 is a specific assignment, and the honest answer depends entirely on how deep you already are in NASCAR Heat 4. The Season Pass bundles four monthly content packs - September through December - into a single purchase, and the headline addition is NASCAR legend Jeff Gordon as a playable driver in both Quick Race and Online Multiplayer, complete with his own spotter audio pack. That alone is catnip for fans who remember the 24 car in its prime. Beyond Jeff Gordon, the four packs pile on a substantial number of officially licensed paint schemes across the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, the NASCAR Xfinity Series, and the NASCAR Camping World Trucks Series. We're talking dozens of liveries spread across the monthly drops, plus new challenge scenarios that unlock additional customization options for your garage. The November pack also introduced a Competition Mode, accessible in Quick Race at the AI difficulty ceiling of 105, which locks certain settings to provide a harder, more structured challenge for players who find the base difficulty too forgiving. A drafting effect slider and online Strict Cautions mode also arrived through the pass, which matters because the base game's online suite was already criticized for being a bit thin on options. The base game that this DLC sits on top of is a mixed but generally solid foundation. The physics overhaul in Heat 4 gave cars a noticeably heavier feel compared to earlier entries, with multi-point physics replacing the old single-axis rotation that made cars feel like they pivoted on a pin. Tire wear sliders, draft partner mechanics, and the ability to start your Career mode from any series rather than grinding up from the Xtreme Dirt Tour were all meaningful quality-of-life wins. The AI, while improved, still drew criticism for being inconsistent, and the online mode was considered behind the curve even at launch. Local split-screen does exist, which is a genuine win for couch play, though this is not the four-drunk-friends kart racer experience - it is a relatively faithful oval racing sim with assist options that make it accessible to casual players. The practical question in 2026 is whether the base game's online community still has enough players to make the online multiplayer portions of the pass meaningful. That ship has likely sailed for most regions. What remains is the offline value: the extra paint schemes for Career customization, the challenge scenarios, Jeff Gordon as a selectable driver, and the Competition Mode for hardcore solo players who want the game to push back hard. If you are picking up NASCAR Heat 4 for offline Career sessions and want the complete package of content from its launch year, the Season Pass is a reasonable add-on. If you only dabble in Quick Race occasionally, the individual packs you actually want would serve you better if they are still available separately. Riley, Scout Team

NASCAR Heat 4 - Season Pass (DLC)
Single PlayerRacing

NASCAR Heat 4 - Season Pass (DLC)

Sep 13, 2019Monster Games704 Games Company
GamerScout Says

Four monthly DLC packs bundled into one pass - worth grabbing if you're committed to NH4's career grind and want Jeff Gordon in Quick Race without hunting down each drop separately.

PC
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About NASCAR Heat 4 - Season Pass (DLC)

I'll be straight with you: reviewing a Season Pass for a 2019 NASCAR game in 2026 is a specific assignment, and the honest answer depends entirely on how deep you already are in NASCAR Heat 4. The Season Pass bundles four monthly content packs - September through December - into a single purchase, and the headline addition is NASCAR legend Jeff Gordon as a playable driver in both Quick Race and Online Multiplayer, complete with his own spotter audio pack. That alone is catnip for fans who remember the 24 car in its prime. Beyond Jeff Gordon, the four packs pile on a substantial number of officially licensed paint schemes across the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series, the NASCAR Xfinity Series, and the NASCAR Camping World Trucks Series. We're talking dozens of liveries spread across the monthly drops, plus new challenge scenarios that unlock additional customization options for your garage. The November pack also introduced a Competition Mode, accessible in Quick Race at the AI difficulty ceiling of 105, which locks certain settings to provide a harder, more structured challenge for players who find the base difficulty too forgiving. A drafting effect slider and online Strict Cautions mode also arrived through the pass, which matters because the base game's online suite was already criticized for being a bit thin on options. The base game that this DLC sits on top of is a mixed but generally solid foundation. The physics overhaul in Heat 4 gave cars a noticeably heavier feel compared to earlier entries, with multi-point physics replacing the old single-axis rotation that made cars feel like they pivoted on a pin. Tire wear sliders, draft partner mechanics, and the ability to start your Career mode from any series rather than grinding up from the Xtreme Dirt Tour were all meaningful quality-of-life wins. The AI, while improved, still drew criticism for being inconsistent, and the online mode was considered behind the curve even at launch. Local split-screen does exist, which is a genuine win for couch play, though this is not the four-drunk-friends kart racer experience - it is a relatively faithful oval racing sim with assist options that make it accessible to casual players. The practical question in 2026 is whether the base game's online community still has enough players to make the online multiplayer portions of the pass meaningful. That ship has likely sailed for most regions. What remains is the offline value: the extra paint schemes for Career customization, the challenge scenarios, Jeff Gordon as a selectable driver, and the Competition Mode for hardcore solo players who want the game to push back hard. If you are picking up NASCAR Heat 4 for offline Career sessions and want the complete package of content from its launch year, the Season Pass is a reasonable add-on. If you only dabble in Quick Race occasionally, the individual packs you actually want would serve you better if they are still available separately. Riley, Scout Team

Tags

steamOfficial LiveriesLegend DriverCareer DLCChallenge ModeCompetition ModeSpotter AudioPaint SchemesOffline-First

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
11
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
18 GB
Graphics
Nvidia GTX 460 or AMD HD 5870
Processor
Intel Core i3 530 or AMD FX 4100
Additional Notes
Supported Graphics Cards: AMD HD5870 or better, HD6870 or better, HD7790 or better, R7 260 or better, R9 260 or better, Nvidia GTX460 or better, GTX560 or better, GTX650Ti or better, GTX750 or better, GTX950 or better
System requirements
64bit Windows 7, 8 10

Recommended

Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
11
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
18 GB
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660Ti or AMD Radeon RX 590
Processor
Intel i5 9600k or AMD Ryzen 5 2600x
System requirements
64bit Windows 10

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Monster Games
Publisher
704 Games Company
Release Date
Sep 13, 2019

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