Compare Need for Speed™ Payback prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Ghost Games. Published by Electronic Arts. Released on 6/18/2020. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action, Adventure, Racing, Sports, Strategy. Metacritic score: 62/100.

Fast-and-Furious energy wrapped around a grind problem: the driving feels great until the Speed Card loot system slows everything to a crawl.

I've put time into a lot of arcade racers, and the moment-to-moment driving in NFS Payback is genuinely the highlight of the package. Ghost Games built something that handles closer to old-school Burnout than a modern sim, which means you can throw a car sideways into a corner with basically no setup and feel like a hero doing it. The Fortune Valley open world covers a fictionalized Las Vegas sprawl with street circuits, off-road desert runs, drag strips and drift zones all sharing the same map, so there's always something close by to jump into. That variety is real, and for casual players who just want to blast around without reading a manual, the low barrier to entry is a genuine plus. Where things fall apart is the progression. Instead of the classic earn-money-buy-parts loop, Payback uses Speed Cards, a randomized upgrade system that gates every car class behind luck as much as skill. You play Tyler the street racer, Mac the off-road showman, or Jess the wheelman, and each character needs their own pool of cards to stay competitive. The grind to keep all three cars race-ready is substantial, and at launch the system was tied closely enough to optional purchases that EA had to patch the reward rates post-release in response to community backlash. The patched version is less painful, but the friction never fully disappears. Hunting down Derelict cars scattered around the world and rebuilding them from scrap is a bright spot, a genuinely satisfying side project that gives the grind some direction. The story swings hard at a Fast and Furious vibe, crew betrayal, revenge, a crime syndicate called The House running the city's casinos and cops. The setup works fine on paper but the in-game cinematics use stiff character models, and the dialogue is relentless during races, where characters chatter over your headset whether you want them to or not. Police chases, one of the series' traditional highlights, are mostly mission-restricted here rather than free-roam threats, which reduces the tension considerably. The cop AI is passive enough that evading them rarely requires anything more than reaching a designated escape marker. On the multiplayer side, the online modes are functional but thin. This is not a couch co-op game, there is no split-screen, and if your Saturday night plan was four players on one TV, Payback is the wrong pick entirely. Online play exists but the community has thinned out over the years, so finding populated lobbies takes patience. Treat this as a solo campaign with optional online side events and your expectations will land in the right place. If you are coming from NFS Heat or Most Wanted (2012), the comparison will not favor Payback, but if you have not touched the series in a while and want an approachable arcade racer with deep visual customization, neon lights, widebody kits and a radio station narrating your exploits, there is a decent weekend here once the Speed Card frustration becomes background noise. Riley, Scout Team

Need for Speed™ Payback

Need for Speed™ Payback

Jun 18, 2020Ghost GamesElectronic Arts
GamerScout Says

Fast-and-Furious energy wrapped around a grind problem: the driving feels great until the Speed Card loot system slows everything to a crawl.

PCXbox
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Historical low: €3.20

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About Need for Speed™ Payback

I've put time into a lot of arcade racers, and the moment-to-moment driving in NFS Payback is genuinely the highlight of the package. Ghost Games built something that handles closer to old-school Burnout than a modern sim, which means you can throw a car sideways into a corner with basically no setup and feel like a hero doing it. The Fortune Valley open world covers a fictionalized Las Vegas sprawl with street circuits, off-road desert runs, drag strips and drift zones all sharing the same map, so there's always something close by to jump into. That variety is real, and for casual players who just want to blast around without reading a manual, the low barrier to entry is a genuine plus. Where things fall apart is the progression. Instead of the classic earn-money-buy-parts loop, Payback uses Speed Cards, a randomized upgrade system that gates every car class behind luck as much as skill. You play Tyler the street racer, Mac the off-road showman, or Jess the wheelman, and each character needs their own pool of cards to stay competitive. The grind to keep all three cars race-ready is substantial, and at launch the system was tied closely enough to optional purchases that EA had to patch the reward rates post-release in response to community backlash. The patched version is less painful, but the friction never fully disappears. Hunting down Derelict cars scattered around the world and rebuilding them from scrap is a bright spot, a genuinely satisfying side project that gives the grind some direction. The story swings hard at a Fast and Furious vibe, crew betrayal, revenge, a crime syndicate called The House running the city's casinos and cops. The setup works fine on paper but the in-game cinematics use stiff character models, and the dialogue is relentless during races, where characters chatter over your headset whether you want them to or not. Police chases, one of the series' traditional highlights, are mostly mission-restricted here rather than free-roam threats, which reduces the tension considerably. The cop AI is passive enough that evading them rarely requires anything more than reaching a designated escape marker. On the multiplayer side, the online modes are functional but thin. This is not a couch co-op game, there is no split-screen, and if your Saturday night plan was four players on one TV, Payback is the wrong pick entirely. Online play exists but the community has thinned out over the years, so finding populated lobbies takes patience. Treat this as a solo campaign with optional online side events and your expectations will land in the right place. If you are coming from NFS Heat or Most Wanted (2012), the comparison will not favor Payback, but if you have not touched the series in a while and want an approachable arcade racer with deep visual customization, neon lights, widebody kits and a radio station narrating your exploits, there is a decent weekend here once the Speed Card frustration becomes background noise.

Riley
Riley · Scout Team

Sports & racing

Tags

singleplayermultiplayercooponline-coopachievementsArcade RacerOpen World DrivingSpeed Card ProgressionCar CustomizationDerelict HuntingFortune ValleyThree-Character RosterPolice ChasesFast and Furious Tone

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
Intel i3 6300 @ 3.8GHz or AMD FX 8150 @ 3.6GHz with 4 hardware threads
Memory
6 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce®…

Recommended

OS
64-bit Windows 10 or later
Processor
Intel i5 4690K @ 3.5GHz or AMD FX 8350 @ 4.0GHz with 4 hardware threads
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
AMD Radeon™…

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
62
Steam
85%(31,459)

Game Info

Developer
Ghost Games
Publisher
Electronic Arts
Release Date
Jun 18, 2020
Age Rating
PEGI 10

Game Modes

singleplayer
multiplayer
coop
online coop
Online Co-op

Languages

Audio (8)
EnglishFrenchSpanish - SpainItalianGermanJapanese+2 more
Subtitles (11)
EnglishFrenchSpanish - SpainItalianGermanJapanese+5 more

Features

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Frequently asked questions about Need for Speed™ Payback

How much does Need for Speed™ Payback cost?

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What platforms is Need for Speed™ Payback available on?

Need for Speed™ Payback is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Need for Speed™ Payback released?

Need for Speed™ Payback was released on 18 June 2020.

Who developed Need for Speed™ Payback?

Need for Speed™ Payback was developed by Ghost Games and published by Electronic Arts.

Is Need for Speed™ Payback worth buying?

Need for Speed™ Payback holds a Metacritic score of 62/100, making it one of the standout Action titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.