Compare Tony Stewart's All-American Racing prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Monster Games, Inc.. Published by Monster Games, Inc.. Released on 9/4/2020. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Racing, Simulation, Sports.

Dirt oval racing for people who still believe Saturday nights belong on a short track - three car classes, split-screen, and 26 tracks of sideways sliding fun.

My first reaction booting this up was genuine surprise that a short-track dirt oval game this niche even exists on PC and console - and then I lost an hour before I remembered to eat dinner. Monster Games built All-American Racing around three distinct vehicle classes: the nimble US Legend Cars, the scrappy Street Stocks, and the heavy, tank-like Big-Block Modifieds. Each handles differently in a meaningful way. The Legend Cars and Street Stocks feel quick and twitchy, while the Big-Block Modifieds are a lumbering, momentum-heavy beast that rewards patience through corners. All three demand counter-steering on dirt, and when the physics click, it genuinely feels like the car is fighting the track rather than just gliding over it. For the couch-crowd question - yes, local split-screen is here, and yes, it works. Online goes up to 25 players, which is more chaotic and fun than you'd expect from a short-oval game. The difficulty range is wide enough that a first-timer can slap on stability assists and still have a good time, while sim-leaning players can strip the aids away and wrestle the car themselves. That said, the AI has a well-documented aggression problem at certain difficulty steps: on Hard you can dominate, on Expert you get punted into the wall. The jump between those two settings is a real design gap, and a custom difficulty slider would have fixed it entirely. The Career mode is the meat of the solo offering. It's non-linear, which means you choose your series, hire staff, manage finances, upgrade your chassis, engine, frame, and tires, and build something that resembles a racing organisation over multiple seasons. Progress is slow and deliberate - don't expect your Street Stock to feel competitive after five races. That grind will either feel rewarding or tedious depending on how much you enjoy incremental team management between the actual driving. If you liked the old-school business layer in Nascar games from the early 2000s, this scratches that specific itch. Quick Race and Championship modes cover the sessions where you just want to skip the spreadsheet and get sideways. Visually, it's functional rather than impressive. The cars themselves look solid, dirt accumulates on bodywork as the race goes on, and the track surfaces shift under headlights in a way that feels authentic. The surrounding environment - grandstands, infield, sky boxes - are basic enough that you notice, but during the race your eyes stay on the racing line anyway. The soundtrack is full country and radio rock, which either fits perfectly or will send you straight to the options menu to mute it. Either choice is valid. This is absolutely a niche game, and it owns that identity without apology. If you want a broad-spectrum racing game covering tarmac, open-wheel, and street circuits, look elsewhere. But if the words Big-Block Modified or Street Stock mean anything to you, or if you just want a low-barrier, split-screen-friendly racer that four people can enjoy on a couch with minimal setup, All-American Racing delivers that specific thing better than anything else currently on PC. Riley, Scout Team

Tony Stewart's All-American Racing
RacingSimulationSports

Tony Stewart's All-American Racing

Sep 4, 2020Monster Games, Inc.
GamerScout Says

Dirt oval racing for people who still believe Saturday nights belong on a short track - three car classes, split-screen, and 26 tracks of sideways sliding fun.

PCXbox
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Historical low: $18.03

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Screenshots & Media

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About Tony Stewart's All-American Racing

My first reaction booting this up was genuine surprise that a short-track dirt oval game this niche even exists on PC and console - and then I lost an hour before I remembered to eat dinner. Monster Games built All-American Racing around three distinct vehicle classes: the nimble US Legend Cars, the scrappy Street Stocks, and the heavy, tank-like Big-Block Modifieds. Each handles differently in a meaningful way. The Legend Cars and Street Stocks feel quick and twitchy, while the Big-Block Modifieds are a lumbering, momentum-heavy beast that rewards patience through corners. All three demand counter-steering on dirt, and when the physics click, it genuinely feels like the car is fighting the track rather than just gliding over it. For the couch-crowd question - yes, local split-screen is here, and yes, it works. Online goes up to 25 players, which is more chaotic and fun than you'd expect from a short-oval game. The difficulty range is wide enough that a first-timer can slap on stability assists and still have a good time, while sim-leaning players can strip the aids away and wrestle the car themselves. That said, the AI has a well-documented aggression problem at certain difficulty steps: on Hard you can dominate, on Expert you get punted into the wall. The jump between those two settings is a real design gap, and a custom difficulty slider would have fixed it entirely. The Career mode is the meat of the solo offering. It's non-linear, which means you choose your series, hire staff, manage finances, upgrade your chassis, engine, frame, and tires, and build something that resembles a racing organisation over multiple seasons. Progress is slow and deliberate - don't expect your Street Stock to feel competitive after five races. That grind will either feel rewarding or tedious depending on how much you enjoy incremental team management between the actual driving. If you liked the old-school business layer in Nascar games from the early 2000s, this scratches that specific itch. Quick Race and Championship modes cover the sessions where you just want to skip the spreadsheet and get sideways. Visually, it's functional rather than impressive. The cars themselves look solid, dirt accumulates on bodywork as the race goes on, and the track surfaces shift under headlights in a way that feels authentic. The surrounding environment - grandstands, infield, sky boxes - are basic enough that you notice, but during the race your eyes stay on the racing line anyway. The soundtrack is full country and radio rock, which either fits perfectly or will send you straight to the options menu to mute it. Either choice is valid. This is absolutely a niche game, and it owns that identity without apology. If you want a broad-spectrum racing game covering tarmac, open-wheel, and street circuits, look elsewhere. But if the words Big-Block Modified or Street Stock mean anything to you, or if you just want a low-barrier, split-screen-friendly racer that four people can enjoy on a couch with minimal setup, All-American Racing delivers that specific thing better than anything else currently on PC. Riley, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvplocal-multiplayerlocal-coopachievementscloud-savestier:aaaDirt OvalShort-Track RacingSplit-Screen Co-opCareer ManagementDriving AssistsCounter-Steering Physics25-Player Online

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck UnsupportedProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 3 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
64 bit versions of Windows 8 or 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
20 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GTX 750 Ti or AMD Radeon R7 260X (Requires at least 2GB VRAM)
Processor
Intel Core i3 530 or AMD FX 4100
Sound Card
DirectX compatible soundcards

Recommended

OS
64 bit version of Windows 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
20 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660Ti or AMD Radeon RX 590
Processor
Intel i5 9600k or AMD Ryzen 5 2600x
Sound Card
DirectX compatible soundcards
Additional Notes
Supports DirectInput and XInput steering wheels and controllers

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Game Info

Developer
Monster Games, Inc.
Publisher
Monster Games, Inc.
Release Date
Sep 4, 2020

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Price History

2026-06-1018.03(lowest)

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What platforms is Tony Stewart's All-American Racing available on?

Tony Stewart's All-American Racing is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Tony Stewart's All-American Racing released?

Tony Stewart's All-American Racing was released on 4 September 2020.

Who developed Tony Stewart's All-American Racing?

Tony Stewart's All-American Racing was developed by Monster Games, Inc..