
TT Isle of Man: Ride on the Edge 2
The closest thing to strapping a superbike to your face at 200 mph - thrilling for sim-heads, genuinely brutal for anyone expecting MotoGP-lite.
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About TT Isle of Man: Ride on the Edge 2
I want to be upfront with you: if your Saturday night racing crew expects to pass a controller around and immediately have fun, this is not that game. TT Isle of Man: Ride on the Edge 2 is the Assetto Corsa of motorcycle sims - KT Racing went to real-life TT riders to rework the physics from the ground up, and it shows in every white-knuckle meter of the 60 km Snaefell Mountain Course. The sequel is a meaningful step up from a first entry that, frankly, did not earn much goodwill. The handling model is tighter, the suspension feels more supple, and the steering responds with real precision at speed. Clip a curb at 180 mph and you will ragdoll into a hedge, which is both punishing and completely fair. That said, slow hairpins still feel a bit loose and imprecise, and the AI has a habit of running pace that defies physics on certain Time Trial segments - a genuine frustration when you have already pushed your line to the absolute limit. The career mode is where most of your hours will go, and it is structured smarter than you might expect. You start on Supersport bikes, racing fictional road circuits across the UK and Ireland to earn team signatures. Collect enough and you eventually unlock the TT itself - all six laps of the Senior TT, which has a real claim to being one of the hardest single-player challenges in any racing game. Along the way you sign manufacturer contracts, earn prize money, and funnel cash into engine, transmission, and suspension upgrades. The Perk system adds a light risk-reward layer: spend Perk points before a race to gain an advantage, but if you miss the objective you lose both the Perk and the fee. It gives career races a bit of stakes that keeps things interesting past the first season. The fictional support circuits are serviceable but pale next to the Snaefell Mountain Course itself, which remains the undisputed star and the reason to own this game. The open world mode is a nice sandbox for practicing bike setups and learning corner entry speeds without the pressure of a race timer, though most players will dip in briefly and then return to career. Quick Race, Time Attack, and Time Trial round out the single-player side. Multiplayer supports up to eight players online, but the player base has always been thin - do not count on finding a lobby at a random hour. Local multiplayer is hotseat only, so the "four friends on the couch" scenario is a no. The accessibility assists - ABS, combined brakes, a racing line overlay - do help newcomers get oriented, but be honest with yourself: this is a sim with a steep learning curve, and assists only soften the wall, they do not remove it. Controller support works well, and wheel users with a Logitech G27-class setup will find native support that the first game lacked. No force-feedback motorcycle-specific peripheral exists to make this perfect, but a good gamepad gets the job done. Graphics are decent rather than spectacular - weather effects and low-light mountain sections look genuinely impressive, but the overall image quality does not compete with Gran Turismo or Assetto Corsa Competizione at their best. Sound design is a mixed bag: the engine notes and wind roar at full speed are great, the menus and ambient audio less so. Steam user reviews sit at 83 percent positive across over a thousand reviews, which is a fair reflection - road racing fans love it, players expecting an accessible arcade experience bounce off it hard. If you have any affection for the real-world TT races and want the only sim that faithfully recreates every bump and kink of the Snaefell Mountain Course, this is your game. Everyone else should try it on a deep discount with expectations calibrated accordingly. Riley, Scout Team
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Steam Deck & Linux
Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported. Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 13 ProtonDB community reports.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 11
- Storage
- 18 GB available space
- Graphics
- NVIDIA GeForce GTX 630 2GB, or AMD Radeon HD 5870 2GB
- Processor
- Intel Core 2 i5-2300 or AMD Phenom II X6 1100
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 10
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 11
- Storage
- 18 GB available space
- Graphics
- NVIDIA GeForce GTX 780, 3 GB or AMD Radeon R9 290X, 4 GB
- Processor
- Intel Core i7-3770 or AMD FX-8350
Community Discussion
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Reviews & Ratings
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Game Info
- Developer
- KT Racing
- Publisher
- Nacon
- Release Date
- Mar 19, 2020



