Compare Wheel World prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Messhof. Published by Annapurna Interactive. Released on 7/23/2025. Available on PC, Linux. Genres: Adventure, Racing, Sports. Metacritic score: 75/100.

A breezy 5-6 hour cycling adventure that nails the pure feel of two wheels without demanding a single ounce of sim knowledge. If your idea of a good time is vibing through a cel-shaded world on a tricked-out bike, this one's for you.

My Saturday-night crew would never let me get away with calling a singleplayer-only game a "party pick", and honestly, Wheel World doesn't pretend to be one. What it does instead is something rarer for this genre: it makes pedalling feel genuinely good, in that lean-into-the-corner, swear-out-loud-on-a-tight-hairpin way, without asking you to memorise a single stat sheet before you can have fun. Messhof, the small studio best known for the stripped-down sword-dueller Nidhogg, makes a huge leap here into a semi-open 3D world. The riding controls are immediately intuitive, which matters a lot for accessibility. You pedal, brake, and pretty quickly unlock a boost ability tied to Skully, the ghostly bike daemon riding along with you. Crucially, that boost is not a freebie: you charge it by drafting close behind rivals, catching air off jumps, or threading near-misses with traffic. It is a clean, readable risk-reward system that keeps races tense without ever feeling cruel. The world itself is split across several distinct zones, from Mediterranean-style vineyard hills in Tramonto to forests and city streets, and each area brings a different cycling gang with their own race formats. You earn Rep to unlock tougher rivals, build out Skully's legendary parts, and progress the story. Along the way, races ask you to chase multiple objectives: finish first, beat a time, or collect floating letters spelling K-A-T spread across branching off-road paths in a move that should feel immediately familiar to anyone who grew up with Tony Hawk. The bike customisation is where Wheel World earns its repeat playtime. You scavenge parts across the world and in shops, swapping out frames, wheels, forks, handlebars, drivetrains, and seats, each tweaking stats like acceleration, top speed, handling, and grip. Some parts even carry perks, like recharging your boost passively. The difference between a featherweight aero build and a grippy slow-corner setup is noticeable in your hands, which is exactly what you want. Different race types genuinely reward bringing the right configuration. That said, if you come in expecting SSX-style trick combos or deep gear-shifting simulation, you will be disappointed on both counts. There is no trick system, and the multi-speed gear mechanic that unlocks later in the game is underdeveloped and clunky. The AI opponents are also a bit wooden: they follow pre-set lines, clip into you at awkward moments, and occasionally glitch out in ways that are more distracting than race-ruining. Longer dialogue scenes between races drag harder than they should for a game this focused on forward momentum. Visually, the cel-shaded art style is a clear highlight. Reviewers have compared it to riding through a Moebius comic, and that lands as a compliment rather than a cliche. The soundtrack, handled by the Italians Do It Better label, is the kind of italo-disco-adjacent synth record that makes a five-hour game feel like it ends too soon. Performance on PC is generally solid, though some players have reported occasional frame drops and minor physics jank during exploration. The whole experience clocks in at around five to six hours for the main story, with another couple of hours if you chase all the collectibles and optional race objectives. For a busy adult gamer, that focused runtime is a feature. Wheel World is a solo experience with controller support and Steam Deck verification, so it works well as a couch game even if there is no split-screen to share with the group. Skip it if you need a competitive multiplayer hook or a deep sim. Bring it if you want something that feels like a sunny afternoon bike ride filtered through a light fantasy lens, lands softly on difficulty, and sends you off with a smile before you even notice the credits rolling. Riley, Scout Team

Wheel World
AdventureRacingSports

Wheel World

Jul 23, 2025MesshofAnnapurna Interactive
GamerScout Says

A breezy 5-6 hour cycling adventure that nails the pure feel of two wheels without demanding a single ounce of sim knowledge. If your idea of a good time is vibing through a cel-shaded world on a tricked-out bike, this one's for you.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Wheel World

My Saturday-night crew would never let me get away with calling a singleplayer-only game a "party pick", and honestly, Wheel World doesn't pretend to be one. What it does instead is something rarer for this genre: it makes pedalling feel genuinely good, in that lean-into-the-corner, swear-out-loud-on-a-tight-hairpin way, without asking you to memorise a single stat sheet before you can have fun. Messhof, the small studio best known for the stripped-down sword-dueller Nidhogg, makes a huge leap here into a semi-open 3D world. The riding controls are immediately intuitive, which matters a lot for accessibility. You pedal, brake, and pretty quickly unlock a boost ability tied to Skully, the ghostly bike daemon riding along with you. Crucially, that boost is not a freebie: you charge it by drafting close behind rivals, catching air off jumps, or threading near-misses with traffic. It is a clean, readable risk-reward system that keeps races tense without ever feeling cruel. The world itself is split across several distinct zones, from Mediterranean-style vineyard hills in Tramonto to forests and city streets, and each area brings a different cycling gang with their own race formats. You earn Rep to unlock tougher rivals, build out Skully's legendary parts, and progress the story. Along the way, races ask you to chase multiple objectives: finish first, beat a time, or collect floating letters spelling K-A-T spread across branching off-road paths in a move that should feel immediately familiar to anyone who grew up with Tony Hawk. The bike customisation is where Wheel World earns its repeat playtime. You scavenge parts across the world and in shops, swapping out frames, wheels, forks, handlebars, drivetrains, and seats, each tweaking stats like acceleration, top speed, handling, and grip. Some parts even carry perks, like recharging your boost passively. The difference between a featherweight aero build and a grippy slow-corner setup is noticeable in your hands, which is exactly what you want. Different race types genuinely reward bringing the right configuration. That said, if you come in expecting SSX-style trick combos or deep gear-shifting simulation, you will be disappointed on both counts. There is no trick system, and the multi-speed gear mechanic that unlocks later in the game is underdeveloped and clunky. The AI opponents are also a bit wooden: they follow pre-set lines, clip into you at awkward moments, and occasionally glitch out in ways that are more distracting than race-ruining. Longer dialogue scenes between races drag harder than they should for a game this focused on forward momentum. Visually, the cel-shaded art style is a clear highlight. Reviewers have compared it to riding through a Moebius comic, and that lands as a compliment rather than a cliche. The soundtrack, handled by the Italians Do It Better label, is the kind of italo-disco-adjacent synth record that makes a five-hour game feel like it ends too soon. Performance on PC is generally solid, though some players have reported occasional frame drops and minor physics jank during exploration. The whole experience clocks in at around five to six hours for the main story, with another couple of hours if you chase all the collectibles and optional race objectives. For a busy adult gamer, that focused runtime is a feature. Wheel World is a solo experience with controller support and Steam Deck verification, so it works well as a couch game even if there is no split-screen to share with the group. Skip it if you need a competitive multiplayer hook or a deep sim. Bring it if you want something that feels like a sunny afternoon bike ride filtered through a light fantasy lens, lands softly on difficulty, and sends you off with a smile before you even notice the credits rolling. Riley, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:indieCel-ShadedBike CustomisationArcade RacingRep SystemOpen-World ExplorationCouch-FriendlySynth SoundtrackGang RivalrySteam Deck Verified

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Gold

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Verified. Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 11 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10
Memory
12 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060, 6GB or AMD Radeon RX 5500 XT, 8GB or Intel Arc A380, 6GB
Processor
Intel Core i7-3770 or AMD Ryzen 5 1400

Recommended

OS
Windows 11
Memory
12 GB RAM
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1660 SUPER, 6GB or AMD Radeon RX 5600, 6GB or Intel Arc A750, 8GB
Processor
Intel Core i3-13100 or AMD Ryzen 5 5500

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
75

Game Info

Developer
Messhof
Publisher
Annapurna Interactive
Release Date
Jul 23, 2025

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Price History

2026-06-108.09(lowest)

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Frequently asked questions about Wheel World

How much does Wheel World cost?

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Where can I buy Wheel World cheapest?

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What platforms is Wheel World available on?

Wheel World is available on PC, Linux.

When was Wheel World released?

Wheel World was released on 23 July 2025.

Who developed Wheel World?

Wheel World was developed by Messhof and published by Annapurna Interactive.

Is Wheel World worth buying?

Wheel World holds a Metacritic score of 75/100, making it one of the standout Adventure titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.