Compare Russian Roads prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Laush Dmitriy Sergeevich. Published by Laush Studio. Released on 1/4/2018. Available on PC. Genres: Indie, Racing, Simulation.

Dirt-cheap, dirt-covered, and almost entirely without depth: Russian Roads is a novelty purchase, not a racing game you'll return to after the first 20 minutes.

I've looked at a lot of budget racing titles in my time, and Russian Roads sits squarely in the category of 'Greenlight curiosity' rather than 'sim worth your Saturday.' The premise is straightforward: race Soviet-era and Russian domestic cars across bumpy, muddy off-road tracks, beat opponents to the finish line, and collect coins to upgrade your ride. On paper it sounds like a rough-and-ready charm piece. In practice, the experience is over almost before it starts. The vehicle roster comes in at just two cars, and the upgrade loop is correspondingly thin. You can swap in engine parts, fit new wheels, and repaint your car in the garage - the cheat code 'laush' handed around the community nets you 200 free coins if you want to skip even that light grind. Customization is cosmetic as much as mechanical, and since there are only two vehicles to unlock and modify, the decision-making tree anyone who cares about build variety will expect simply is not here. Compare this to something like SpinTires or Snowrunner, where vehicle selection and loadout genuinely change how you approach terrain, and Russian Roads feels like a tech demo that shipped. The off-road racing itself does have a rough, chaotic energy to it. Potholes are present, mud is present, hills are present - and at least one level (level 6, from community chatter) includes a mud pit that players have openly debated whether it is actually escapable. That kind of absurdist difficulty is either endearing or infuriating depending on your patience. The Steam community has tagged this game with 'Memes' and 'Comedy,' which tells you exactly what the survival audience is getting out of it. Steam reviews land at around 70% positive across roughly 130 ratings, which means a genuine portion of buyers found something to enjoy here, but the volume of reviews citing incompleteness and missing content is hard to ignore. One frustration worth flagging: the game is themed around Russian automotive culture but ships without Russian language support, which community members have pointed out with some irritation. There is no tutorial to speak of, no meaningful AI opponent behavior to read or exploit, and no mod ecosystem to extend the content. For strategy-and-sim fans hoping to find a hidden gem with a niche hook, the hook does not go deep enough. Achievements exist, Steam trading cards exist (seven of them, including 'The hole in the road,' which might be the most honest card name in the database), and Family Sharing works - so if a friend already owns it, grab a session for free before committing. The honest use case here is as a laugh-shared-with-friends purchase at the lowest possible price tier, not a solo sim to sink hours into. If you want genuine mud-physics off-roading with Russian vehicles as a theme, the older Off-Road Drive covers that ground with far more mechanical sincerity. Russian Roads is a footnote, not a destination. Diego, Scout Team

Russian Roads
IndieRacingSimulation

Russian Roads

Jan 4, 2018Laush Dmitriy SergeevichLaush Studio
GamerScout Says

Dirt-cheap, dirt-covered, and almost entirely without depth: Russian Roads is a novelty purchase, not a racing game you'll return to after the first 20 minutes.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Russian Roads

I've looked at a lot of budget racing titles in my time, and Russian Roads sits squarely in the category of 'Greenlight curiosity' rather than 'sim worth your Saturday.' The premise is straightforward: race Soviet-era and Russian domestic cars across bumpy, muddy off-road tracks, beat opponents to the finish line, and collect coins to upgrade your ride. On paper it sounds like a rough-and-ready charm piece. In practice, the experience is over almost before it starts. The vehicle roster comes in at just two cars, and the upgrade loop is correspondingly thin. You can swap in engine parts, fit new wheels, and repaint your car in the garage - the cheat code 'laush' handed around the community nets you 200 free coins if you want to skip even that light grind. Customization is cosmetic as much as mechanical, and since there are only two vehicles to unlock and modify, the decision-making tree anyone who cares about build variety will expect simply is not here. Compare this to something like SpinTires or Snowrunner, where vehicle selection and loadout genuinely change how you approach terrain, and Russian Roads feels like a tech demo that shipped. The off-road racing itself does have a rough, chaotic energy to it. Potholes are present, mud is present, hills are present - and at least one level (level 6, from community chatter) includes a mud pit that players have openly debated whether it is actually escapable. That kind of absurdist difficulty is either endearing or infuriating depending on your patience. The Steam community has tagged this game with 'Memes' and 'Comedy,' which tells you exactly what the survival audience is getting out of it. Steam reviews land at around 70% positive across roughly 130 ratings, which means a genuine portion of buyers found something to enjoy here, but the volume of reviews citing incompleteness and missing content is hard to ignore. One frustration worth flagging: the game is themed around Russian automotive culture but ships without Russian language support, which community members have pointed out with some irritation. There is no tutorial to speak of, no meaningful AI opponent behavior to read or exploit, and no mod ecosystem to extend the content. For strategy-and-sim fans hoping to find a hidden gem with a niche hook, the hook does not go deep enough. Achievements exist, Steam trading cards exist (seven of them, including 'The hole in the road,' which might be the most honest card name in the database), and Family Sharing works - so if a friend already owns it, grab a session for free before committing. The honest use case here is as a laugh-shared-with-friends purchase at the lowest possible price tier, not a solo sim to sink hours into. If you want genuine mud-physics off-roading with Russian vehicles as a theme, the older Off-Road Drive covers that ground with far more mechanical sincerity. Russian Roads is a footnote, not a destination. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardstier:sub-5Offroad-RacingMeme-GameMicro-BudgetVehicle-UpgradeShort-SessionCasual-RacingMud-Physics

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP and newer
Memory
1024 MB RAM
Storage
1000 MB available space
Graphics
GeForce EN9600 GT
Processor
Athlon 2 X3 450

Recommended

OS
Windows XP and newer
Memory
2048 MB RAM
Storage
1500 MB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 750ti
Processor
AMD fx6300

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Game Info

Developer
Laush Dmitriy Sergeevich
Publisher
Laush Studio
Release Date
Jan 4, 2018

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Price History

2026-06-101.01(lowest)
2026-06-091.01(lowest)

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Frequently asked questions about Russian Roads

How much does Russian Roads cost?

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What platforms is Russian Roads available on?

Russian Roads is available on PC.

When was Russian Roads released?

Russian Roads was released on 4 January 2018.

Who developed Russian Roads?

Russian Roads was developed by Laush Dmitriy Sergeevich and published by Laush Studio.