Compare Urban Trial Freestyle prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Tate Multimedia. Published by Tate Multimedia. Released on 9/18/2013. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Racing, Simulation, Sports. Metacritic score: 58/100.

If you want Trials but softer around the edges, this budget-tier physics biker scratches that itch just enough - though it runs out of ideas faster than you'd like.

I picked this up expecting a stripped-back, approachable take on the physics-biker genre, and that's more or less what it delivers - for a while. Urban Trial Freestyle is a side-scrolling motorbike game built on a simple three-button control scheme: throttle, brake, and rider lean. That's it. Anybody in the group can understand it inside thirty seconds, which makes it genuinely easy to hand the controller to a friend and watch them immediately wipe out in spectacular fashion. The ragdoll crash physics are legitimately funny, which buys it goodwill even when the level design is being stubborn. The structure splits across two modes - Time Attack and Stunt - spread over five urban chapters totalling around 40 levels. In Time Attack you're racing left to right, shaving fractions off your ghost time. In Stunt mode the same track layouts ask you to hit marked zones and pull specific tricks: highest jump, longest distance, successful flips. It sounds like meaningful variety, but the Stunt scoring happens in short predetermined windows rather than giving you a freeform sandbox to string your own combos. Both modes share the same level geometry, so the recycling becomes obvious fast. Ghost data from world leaderboards is pulled in automatically, and your Steam avatar shows up on in-game billboards next to your best stunt scores, which is a fun little touch. Chasing a friend's ghost time is where the actual replay value lives. The physics feel forgiving compared to the genre's stricter entries, which cuts both ways. Newcomers will clear early chapters without too much pain, and the learning curve stays gentle long enough to feel inviting rather than punishing. But that softness means the sense of achievement is blunted - when the game suddenly spikes in difficulty mid-campaign, it feels arbitrary rather than earned. Some environmental hazards, like rotating objects and debris thrown onto the track, lean more on luck than skill, and that gets old. Bike upgrades are funded by collecting hidden money bags scattered through levels, and while you can tune the wheel, chassis, and engine, the customisation depth is shallow. Most outfit purchases are purely cosmetic and easy to ignore. The bigger PC-specific disappointment is the absence of a level editor. On Steam, with Workshop sitting right there, the lack of user-generated content is a genuine missed opportunity and the main reason longevity falls short. There is no local multiplayer or split-screen, so the Saturday night couch tournament dream does not apply here. What you get is a decent solo score-chaser with asynchronous leaderboard competition. Controller support is solid, and a standard gamepad is the clear way to play - the three-input layout maps naturally to triggers and a thumbstick. For pure Trials fans this will feel like a diet version that never quite satisfies. For someone new to the genre, or anyone who finds Trials Evolution's difficulty wall too steep, Urban Trial Freestyle is a reasonable entry point. It is short, it is occasionally frustrating for the wrong reasons, and it has no level editor. But the crashes are funny, the early levels are fun in short bursts, and the leaderboard rivalry gives it a modest competitive hook that the base content alone cannot sustain. Riley, Scout Team

Urban Trial Freestyle
ActionRacingSimulationSports

Urban Trial Freestyle

Sep 18, 2013Tate Multimedia
GamerScout Says

If you want Trials but softer around the edges, this budget-tier physics biker scratches that itch just enough - though it runs out of ideas faster than you'd like.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

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About Urban Trial Freestyle

I picked this up expecting a stripped-back, approachable take on the physics-biker genre, and that's more or less what it delivers - for a while. Urban Trial Freestyle is a side-scrolling motorbike game built on a simple three-button control scheme: throttle, brake, and rider lean. That's it. Anybody in the group can understand it inside thirty seconds, which makes it genuinely easy to hand the controller to a friend and watch them immediately wipe out in spectacular fashion. The ragdoll crash physics are legitimately funny, which buys it goodwill even when the level design is being stubborn. The structure splits across two modes - Time Attack and Stunt - spread over five urban chapters totalling around 40 levels. In Time Attack you're racing left to right, shaving fractions off your ghost time. In Stunt mode the same track layouts ask you to hit marked zones and pull specific tricks: highest jump, longest distance, successful flips. It sounds like meaningful variety, but the Stunt scoring happens in short predetermined windows rather than giving you a freeform sandbox to string your own combos. Both modes share the same level geometry, so the recycling becomes obvious fast. Ghost data from world leaderboards is pulled in automatically, and your Steam avatar shows up on in-game billboards next to your best stunt scores, which is a fun little touch. Chasing a friend's ghost time is where the actual replay value lives. The physics feel forgiving compared to the genre's stricter entries, which cuts both ways. Newcomers will clear early chapters without too much pain, and the learning curve stays gentle long enough to feel inviting rather than punishing. But that softness means the sense of achievement is blunted - when the game suddenly spikes in difficulty mid-campaign, it feels arbitrary rather than earned. Some environmental hazards, like rotating objects and debris thrown onto the track, lean more on luck than skill, and that gets old. Bike upgrades are funded by collecting hidden money bags scattered through levels, and while you can tune the wheel, chassis, and engine, the customisation depth is shallow. Most outfit purchases are purely cosmetic and easy to ignore. The bigger PC-specific disappointment is the absence of a level editor. On Steam, with Workshop sitting right there, the lack of user-generated content is a genuine missed opportunity and the main reason longevity falls short. There is no local multiplayer or split-screen, so the Saturday night couch tournament dream does not apply here. What you get is a decent solo score-chaser with asynchronous leaderboard competition. Controller support is solid, and a standard gamepad is the clear way to play - the three-input layout maps naturally to triggers and a thumbstick. For pure Trials fans this will feel like a diet version that never quite satisfies. For someone new to the genre, or anyone who finds Trials Evolution's difficulty wall too steep, Urban Trial Freestyle is a reasonable entry point. It is short, it is occasionally frustrating for the wrong reasons, and it has no level editor. But the crashes are funny, the early levels are fun in short bursts, and the leaderboard rivalry gives it a modest competitive hook that the base content alone cannot sustain. Riley, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Physics-PlatformerScore AttackGhost RacingLeaderboard-DrivenGamepad RequiredStunt ModeShort CampaignCasual Friendly

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Platinum

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 9 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP SP2, Vista, 7, 8
Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce 8800 or AMD Radeon HD 4650 with 512 MB video memory
Processor
Intel Core®2 Duo or AMD Athlon 64

Recommended

OS
Windows XP SP2, Vista, 7, 8
Memory
4 GB RAM
Storage
1 GB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce GTX 550 or AMD Radeon HD 5750 with 1024 MB video memory
Processor
Intel Core®2 Duo or AMD Athlon 64

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
58

Game Info

Developer
Tate Multimedia
Publisher
Tate Multimedia
Release Date
Sep 18, 2013

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2026-06-101.00(lowest)

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Urban Trial Freestyle is available on PC.

When was Urban Trial Freestyle released?

Urban Trial Freestyle was released on 18 September 2013.

Who developed Urban Trial Freestyle?

Urban Trial Freestyle was developed by Tate Multimedia.

Is Urban Trial Freestyle worth buying?

Urban Trial Freestyle holds a Metacritic score of 58/100, making it one of the standout Action titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.