Compare Top Racer Collection prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by QUByte Interactive. Published by QUByte Interactive. Released on 3/6/2024. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Casual, Indie, Racing.

Four SNES-era arcade racers in one package, built for nostalgia first and online competition a distant second. Worth the time if couch racing with a friend is the plan.

I came into Top Racer Collection as someone whose frame of reference is tight netcode and sub-100ms reaction windows, and these games are very much not that. What they are is a surprisingly honest preservation of three SNES arcade racers originally known outside Japan as the Top Gear series, plus a fourth entry that is more remix than revelation. If you can accept the terms upfront, there is genuine fun buried in here. The three core games each hold up in distinct ways. The original, released in 1992, keeps it simple: four cars loosely inspired by real sports cars, 32 tracks, manual or automatic gearbox, and nitro boosts you have to time rather than spam. Top Racer 2 layers in car damage management, resource collection, performance upgrades, and weather-based tire changes across 64 tracks, which gives it a more interesting mid-race strategy loop than you might expect from a 16-bit racer. Top Racer 3000 goes completely off the rails in the best way, throwing you into an interplanetary grand prix with 47 tracks on different planets, nuclear fusion engine upgrades, and actual weapons you can use against opponents, including a magnet that drags the car ahead of you backward. Watching the series evolve across these three titles in a single session is genuinely interesting for anyone who cares about genre history. The fourth entry, Top Racer Crossroads, is where the marketing gets a little slippery. It bills itself as a brand new game, but reviewers and community members are right to push back on that. It is effectively a ROM hack of the first game with four new car sprites swapped in, tracks that reference Brazilian automotive culture and nods to other racing games like the Horizon Chase series. The tracks are identical to the originals and the music is unchanged. Fun to see the new vehicles, less convincing as a full game. Mode structure is solid enough: Campaign across all 140 tracks, Time Attack, Quick Race, and Custom Cup where you hand-pick four tracks from any game and set your own bracket. Split-screen two-player works in Top Racer, Top Racer 2, and Crossroads, while Top Racer 3000 bumps that up to four players locally, which is the best reason to own this collection if you have people around. Online multiplayer exists and global leaderboards are live, but player counts at launch were thin enough that finding matches was reported as genuinely difficult. Time Attack grinding for leaderboard placement is probably the most reliable online hook right now. The unified menu system is a point of real frustration for purists. QUByte replaced the original menus across all titles with a shared modern interface, which sounds fine until you realize the original menu music is gone from the main experience and the new replacement tracks are generic. The original tunes are accessible through a sound test, which reads as a half-measure. CRT-style visual filters are available for the retro TV look, and they do the job. The new menus also sit awkwardly against the pixel art of the games themselves, which is a minor but constant visual mismatch. For a shooter specialist watching from the sidelines, the comparison that matters is this: if you already own Horizon Chase Turbo and want that itch scratched, this collection is not the stronger option. But if the specific SNES-era feel, split-screen couch sessions, or pure completionism around the Top Gear lineage is what you are chasing, Top Racer Collection delivers exactly what it says it will. Steam user ratings sit at Very Positive, and that tracks. Manage expectations around the fourth game and the thin online population, and you will be fine. Fred, Scout Team

Top Racer Collection
ActionCasualIndieRacing

Top Racer Collection

Mar 6, 2024QUByte Interactive
GamerScout Says

Four SNES-era arcade racers in one package, built for nostalgia first and online competition a distant second. Worth the time if couch racing with a friend is the plan.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

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About Top Racer Collection

I came into Top Racer Collection as someone whose frame of reference is tight netcode and sub-100ms reaction windows, and these games are very much not that. What they are is a surprisingly honest preservation of three SNES arcade racers originally known outside Japan as the Top Gear series, plus a fourth entry that is more remix than revelation. If you can accept the terms upfront, there is genuine fun buried in here. The three core games each hold up in distinct ways. The original, released in 1992, keeps it simple: four cars loosely inspired by real sports cars, 32 tracks, manual or automatic gearbox, and nitro boosts you have to time rather than spam. Top Racer 2 layers in car damage management, resource collection, performance upgrades, and weather-based tire changes across 64 tracks, which gives it a more interesting mid-race strategy loop than you might expect from a 16-bit racer. Top Racer 3000 goes completely off the rails in the best way, throwing you into an interplanetary grand prix with 47 tracks on different planets, nuclear fusion engine upgrades, and actual weapons you can use against opponents, including a magnet that drags the car ahead of you backward. Watching the series evolve across these three titles in a single session is genuinely interesting for anyone who cares about genre history. The fourth entry, Top Racer Crossroads, is where the marketing gets a little slippery. It bills itself as a brand new game, but reviewers and community members are right to push back on that. It is effectively a ROM hack of the first game with four new car sprites swapped in, tracks that reference Brazilian automotive culture and nods to other racing games like the Horizon Chase series. The tracks are identical to the originals and the music is unchanged. Fun to see the new vehicles, less convincing as a full game. Mode structure is solid enough: Campaign across all 140 tracks, Time Attack, Quick Race, and Custom Cup where you hand-pick four tracks from any game and set your own bracket. Split-screen two-player works in Top Racer, Top Racer 2, and Crossroads, while Top Racer 3000 bumps that up to four players locally, which is the best reason to own this collection if you have people around. Online multiplayer exists and global leaderboards are live, but player counts at launch were thin enough that finding matches was reported as genuinely difficult. Time Attack grinding for leaderboard placement is probably the most reliable online hook right now. The unified menu system is a point of real frustration for purists. QUByte replaced the original menus across all titles with a shared modern interface, which sounds fine until you realize the original menu music is gone from the main experience and the new replacement tracks are generic. The original tunes are accessible through a sound test, which reads as a half-measure. CRT-style visual filters are available for the retro TV look, and they do the job. The new menus also sit awkwardly against the pixel art of the games themselves, which is a minor but constant visual mismatch. For a shooter specialist watching from the sidelines, the comparison that matters is this: if you already own Horizon Chase Turbo and want that itch scratched, this collection is not the stronger option. But if the specific SNES-era feel, split-screen couch sessions, or pure completionism around the Top Gear lineage is what you are chasing, Top Racer Collection delivers exactly what it says it will. Steam user ratings sit at Very Positive, and that tracks. Manage expectations around the fourth game and the thin online population, and you will be fine. Fred, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvplocal-multiplayerlocal-coopachievementstrading-cardscloud-savestier:aaaSNES Arcade RacerNitro ManagementFuel StrategyCouch Co-opCRT FilterGlobal Leaderboards16-bit RacingRetro CompilationInterplanetary Racing

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
64-bit Windows 10 / Windows 11
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
Intel HD 4440
Processor
Intel i3 @ 3.0GHz or AMD equivalent.

Recommended

OS
64-bit Windows 10 / Windows 11
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
4 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce GTX 960
Processor
Intel i5 @ 3.0GHz or AMD equivalent.

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
QUByte Interactive
Publisher
QUByte Interactive
Release Date
Mar 6, 2024

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