Compare Overpass 2 prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Neopica. Published by Nacon. Released on 9/28/2023. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Racing, Simulation. Metacritic score: 63/100.

A brutally niche off-road sim where going slow is the whole point. Rewarding if you think MudRunner is too casual, punishing if you expect anything resembling a typical racing game.

I want to warn you upfront: if you sat down with four friends expecting a chaotic split-screen UTV brawl, Overpass 2 will test your friendships. This is a game where crawling over a boulder at 4 mph while managing your rear-wheel, four-wheel, and differential lock settings is the intended loop, and it expects you to find that satisfying. Whether you do or not will determine pretty much everything about your experience. The three vehicle categories - UTVs, ATVs, and the newly added Rock Bouncers - each handle differently across five race types: off-road sprint, off-road circuit, hill climb, obstacle course, and closed circuit. Rock Bouncers, the big addition over the original, are reinforced cage-on-wheels machines built for bouncing off the nastiest terrain, and they are genuinely the most interesting things to pilot here. The career mode wraps all of this in familiar team management trappings: hire staff, sign sponsors, run R&D, keep your vehicles from falling apart between rounds. It is functional and reasonably deep, though the management layer can feel thin compared to what dedicated motorsport management titles offer. Multiplayer exists both online (up to 8 players) and via split-screen, which is a real point in the game's favour for couch sessions, even if the core game is a tough sell for casual crowds. Here is where it gets complicated. The physics-first premise only works when the controls cooperate, and they frequently do not. Reviewers and players have widely flagged input lag on the analogue stick, where a turn command arrives a beat after you issued it. On slow, deliberate obstacle courses that is merely frustrating. On switchback hill climbs it can send you backwards down a mountain you spent two minutes climbing. The camera compounds things, locking into odd angles after a crash and requiring manual correction mid-event. These are not minor annoyances baked into a difficulty curve; they are technical shortcomings that the sequel carried over from the original without meaningful resolution. Visually, the Unreal Engine 5 underpinning shows up in flashes - a desert sandstorm mid-race, some decent vehicle model detail - but the broader environments read as flat and under-textured for a 2023 release, which most reviewers noted bluntly. Who is this actually for, then? Genuine off-road motorsport fans who appreciate the precision-over-speed discipline will find more here than the Mixed Steam rating suggests. The drive-train switching mechanic does click once you internalise it, and conquering a rocky hill climb cleanly gives a satisfaction you will not get from a kart racer. But that audience is small, and Overpass 2 does almost nothing to grow it. The AI runs inconsistently, the tutorial overstays its welcome, and casual racing players expecting anything resembling the energy of Forza or The Crew will bounce off this hard within the first hour. As a couch co-op option it is a curio at best - split-screen is there, but "is it fun for four friends" gets a qualified no unless all four already know what an obstacle-course UTV race involves. At a sale price, the adventurous niche player might find something worth their time. At full price, most people would be better served looking elsewhere. Riley, Scout Team

Overpass 2

Overpass 2

Sep 28, 2023NeopicaNacon
GamerScout Says

A brutally niche off-road sim where going slow is the whole point. Rewarding if you think MudRunner is too casual, punishing if you expect anything resembling a typical racing game.

PCXbox
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Platinum
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €0.99

GamerScout Verdict

Only for hardcore off-road motorsport fans willing to wrestle with stubborn controls - casual racers should skip it entirely.

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Price History

Historical low
€0.995 Jun 2026
Keyshops
€0.91€0.96€1.02€1.075 Jun15 Jun25 Jun5 Jul15 Jul
5 Jun — 15 Jul
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Screenshots & Media

About Overpass 2

I want to warn you upfront: if you sat down with four friends expecting a chaotic split-screen UTV brawl, Overpass 2 will test your friendships. This is a game where crawling over a boulder at 4 mph while managing your rear-wheel, four-wheel, and differential lock settings is the intended loop, and it expects you to find that satisfying. Whether you do or not will determine pretty much everything about your experience. The three vehicle categories - UTVs, ATVs, and the newly added Rock Bouncers - each handle differently across five race types: off-road sprint, off-road circuit, hill climb, obstacle course, and closed circuit. Rock Bouncers, the big addition over the original, are reinforced cage-on-wheels machines built for bouncing off the nastiest terrain, and they are genuinely the most interesting things to pilot here. The career mode wraps all of this in familiar team management trappings: hire staff, sign sponsors, run R&D, keep your vehicles from falling apart between rounds. It is functional and reasonably deep, though the management layer can feel thin compared to what dedicated motorsport management titles offer. Multiplayer exists both online (up to 8 players) and via split-screen, which is a real point in the game's favour for couch sessions, even if the core game is a tough sell for casual crowds. Here is where it gets complicated. The physics-first premise only works when the controls cooperate, and they frequently do not. Reviewers and players have widely flagged input lag on the analogue stick, where a turn command arrives a beat after you issued it. On slow, deliberate obstacle courses that is merely frustrating. On switchback hill climbs it can send you backwards down a mountain you spent two minutes climbing. The camera compounds things, locking into odd angles after a crash and requiring manual correction mid-event. These are not minor annoyances baked into a difficulty curve; they are technical shortcomings that the sequel carried over from the original without meaningful resolution. Visually, the Unreal Engine 5 underpinning shows up in flashes - a desert sandstorm mid-race, some decent vehicle model detail - but the broader environments read as flat and under-textured for a 2023 release, which most reviewers noted bluntly. Who is this actually for, then? Genuine off-road motorsport fans who appreciate the precision-over-speed discipline will find more here than the Mixed Steam rating suggests. The drive-train switching mechanic does click once you internalise it, and conquering a rocky hill climb cleanly gives a satisfaction you will not get from a kart racer. But that audience is small, and Overpass 2 does almost nothing to grow it. The AI runs inconsistently, the tutorial overstays its welcome, and casual racing players expecting anything resembling the energy of Forza or The Crew will bounce off this hard within the first hour. As a couch co-op option it is a curio at best - split-screen is there, but "is it fun for four friends" gets a qualified no unless all four already know what an obstacle-course UTV race involves. At a sale price, the adventurous niche player might find something worth their time. At full price, most people would be better served looking elsewhere.

Riley
Riley · Scout Team

Sports & racing

Tags

steamOff-Road SimObstacle Course RacingRock BouncerTeam ManagementSplit-Screen MultiplayerPrecision DrivingSlow-Paced SimCareer ModeLicensed Vehicles

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
Intel Core i5-4590 (4 * 3300) or equivalent
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
GeForce GTX 1050 (2048 MB)
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
17 GB available space

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Processor
Intel Core i3-10100 (4 * 3600) or equivalent
Memory
16 GB RAM
Graphics
GeForce GTX 1660 Ti (6144 MB)/ Intel Arc A750 (8192 MB…

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
63
Steam
48%(82)

Game Info

Developer
Neopica
Publisher
Nacon
Release Date
Sep 28, 2023

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Frequently asked questions about Overpass 2

How much does Overpass 2 cost?

Overpass 2 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 Overpass 2 available on?

Overpass 2 is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Overpass 2 released?

Overpass 2 was released on 28 September 2023.

Who developed Overpass 2?

Overpass 2 was developed by Neopica and published by Nacon.

Is Overpass 2 worth buying?

Overpass 2 holds a Metacritic score of 63/100, making it one of the standout Racing titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.