Compare NASCAR Heat Evolution prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Monster Games. Published by Dusenberry Martin Racing. Released on 9/13/2016. Available on PC. Genres: Single Player, Racing.

Monster Games' NASCAR revival dishes out 23 real tracks and 43 Sprint Cup drivers, but skimpy presentation and locked content drag it below the starting line.

NASCAR Heat Evolution is a stock car racing game developed by Monster Games, the studio behind the early-2000s NASCAR Heat cult favourites, making a long-awaited return to the oval after more than a decade away. It covers the full 2016 Sprint Cup season with all 23 licensed tracks, from the high banks of Talladega to the tight corners of Martinsville, plus 43 real drivers spread across teams like Joe Gibbs Racing, Stewart-Haas, Hendrick Motorsports, and Team Penske. Modes on offer include a quick Race, Challenges (where you try to match or beat real-life NASCAR records), Season, Chase for the Cup, online multiplayer, and Career, where you build your own team from scratch and chase the championship. On the handling side, you can toggle between Normal and Simulation physics. Normal is genuinely forgiving and accessible, with assists like traction control and adjustable steering sensitivity that let a total newcomer hop in and actually enjoy themselves. Simulation is a different animal, notoriously twitchy, especially at restrictor-plate tracks like Daytona, and multiple reviewers found it more punishing than rewarding. Drafting is a real mechanic, so superspeedway packs create genuine tension, and the adaptive AI adjusts to your skill rating, which sounds great in theory. In practice, the three-and-four-wide moments everyone was promised are also the moments the frame rate nosedives, and the cockpit view tanks performance further because the rear mirror is always on in that camera. Casual players on gamepad will want to stick with the hood or broadcast cam. Wheel support is present, but given the frame rate issues in cockpit view, that immersive setup comes with a real compromise. The biggest frustration for anyone buying this cold is the track-locking system. A large chunk of those 23 circuits are gated behind Career progression and speed-point accumulation, which means if you just want to jump into a quick race at Bristol on a Saturday night, you may not have it unlocked yet. That is genuinely rough for casual or social play. There is no split-screen either, so the "four friends on the couch" scenario is completely off the table. Online multiplayer supports up to 40 human players via server-hosted races, which is ambitious, and the netcode was reportedly solid at launch. However, all NASCAR Heat titles and their online servers were shut down in 2025 following a license transfer, so that multiplayer angle is now moot and the game is offline-only. Presentation is where even generous reviewers winced. Visuals look a generation behind, the crowd is cardboard flat, damage modelling is nearly non-existent beyond a health indicator and a faint wisp of smoke, and the engine audio was reportedly recycled from much older assets. The menus are functional but bare. Career mode car setup is limited to tape, wedge, and tyre pressure, which will leave setup obsessives cold. If you have nostalgia for the early Monster Games NASCAR titles and just want laps with a licensed roster on authentic circuits, Normal mode delivers an accessible, occasionally exciting experience. If you are comparing it to a proper sim or expecting depth, you will find it wanting. The later entries in the Heat series improved on almost every one of these complaints, so Evolution is mainly relevant now as a low-cost historical curiosity for committed oval fans. Riley, Scout Team

NASCAR Heat Evolution
Single PlayerRacing

NASCAR Heat Evolution

Sep 13, 2016Monster GamesDusenberry Martin Racing
GamerScout Says

Monster Games' NASCAR revival dishes out 23 real tracks and 43 Sprint Cup drivers, but skimpy presentation and locked content drag it below the starting line.

PC
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €4.46

GamerScout Verdict

Decent oval fun on Normal difficulty for NASCAR faithful, but too bare-bones and content-locked to recommend to anyone else.

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Price History

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€4.4613 Jun 2026
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Screenshots & Media

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About NASCAR Heat Evolution

NASCAR Heat Evolution is a stock car racing game developed by Monster Games, the studio behind the early-2000s NASCAR Heat cult favourites, making a long-awaited return to the oval after more than a decade away. It covers the full 2016 Sprint Cup season with all 23 licensed tracks, from the high banks of Talladega to the tight corners of Martinsville, plus 43 real drivers spread across teams like Joe Gibbs Racing, Stewart-Haas, Hendrick Motorsports, and Team Penske. Modes on offer include a quick Race, Challenges (where you try to match or beat real-life NASCAR records), Season, Chase for the Cup, online multiplayer, and Career, where you build your own team from scratch and chase the championship. On the handling side, you can toggle between Normal and Simulation physics. Normal is genuinely forgiving and accessible, with assists like traction control and adjustable steering sensitivity that let a total newcomer hop in and actually enjoy themselves. Simulation is a different animal, notoriously twitchy, especially at restrictor-plate tracks like Daytona, and multiple reviewers found it more punishing than rewarding. Drafting is a real mechanic, so superspeedway packs create genuine tension, and the adaptive AI adjusts to your skill rating, which sounds great in theory. In practice, the three-and-four-wide moments everyone was promised are also the moments the frame rate nosedives, and the cockpit view tanks performance further because the rear mirror is always on in that camera. Casual players on gamepad will want to stick with the hood or broadcast cam. Wheel support is present, but given the frame rate issues in cockpit view, that immersive setup comes with a real compromise. The biggest frustration for anyone buying this cold is the track-locking system. A large chunk of those 23 circuits are gated behind Career progression and speed-point accumulation, which means if you just want to jump into a quick race at Bristol on a Saturday night, you may not have it unlocked yet. That is genuinely rough for casual or social play. There is no split-screen either, so the "four friends on the couch" scenario is completely off the table. Online multiplayer supports up to 40 human players via server-hosted races, which is ambitious, and the netcode was reportedly solid at launch. However, all NASCAR Heat titles and their online servers were shut down in 2025 following a license transfer, so that multiplayer angle is now moot and the game is offline-only. Presentation is where even generous reviewers winced. Visuals look a generation behind, the crowd is cardboard flat, damage modelling is nearly non-existent beyond a health indicator and a faint wisp of smoke, and the engine audio was reportedly recycled from much older assets. The menus are functional but bare. Career mode car setup is limited to tape, wedge, and tyre pressure, which will leave setup obsessives cold. If you have nostalgia for the early Monster Games NASCAR titles and just want laps with a licensed roster on authentic circuits, Normal mode delivers an accessible, occasionally exciting experience. If you are comparing it to a proper sim or expecting depth, you will find it wanting. The later entries in the Heat series improved on almost every one of these complaints, so Evolution is mainly relevant now as a low-cost historical curiosity for committed oval fans.

Riley
Riley · Scout Team

Sports & racing

Tags

steamOval RacingLicensed DriversAdaptive AIArcade-Sim HybridCareer ModeDrafting MechanicTyre WearNo Split-ScreenWheel CompatibleOnline Defunct

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
11
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
10 GB
Graphics
Nvidia GTX 460 or AMD HD 5870
Processor
Intel Core i3 530 or AMD FX 4100
System requirements
64bit Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 10

Recommended

Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
11
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
10 GB
Graphics
Nvidia GTX 980 or AMD R9 Fury
Processor
Intel Core i5 4690 or AMD FX 8320
System requirements
64bit Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 10

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Game Info

Developer
Monster Games
Publisher
Dusenberry Martin Racing
Release Date
Sep 13, 2016

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Frequently asked questions about NASCAR Heat Evolution

How much does NASCAR Heat Evolution cost?

NASCAR Heat Evolution pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

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What platforms is NASCAR Heat Evolution available on?

NASCAR Heat Evolution is available on PC.

When was NASCAR Heat Evolution released?

NASCAR Heat Evolution was released on 13 September 2016.

Who developed NASCAR Heat Evolution?

NASCAR Heat Evolution was developed by Monster Games and published by Dusenberry Martin Racing.