Compare World Truck Racing prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Homa Design. Published by SIG Publishing. Released on 9/16/2014. Available on PC. Genres: Racing.

Truck racing sounds like a brilliant niche idea, but World Truck Racing squanders it with paper-thin AI, locked automatic transmissions, and a known tournament-breaking bug that requires a registry edit to fix.

I went into World Truck Racing genuinely excited, because close-contact truck racing is a legitimately fun motorsport concept that almost nobody covers in games. Two classes of big-rig cabs, 12 trucks total, 16 circuits inspired by real-world locations, four race modes, and a visual plus mechanical tuning garage on paper that sounds like a solid budget racer. The reality, unfortunately, is much thinner than the premise. The handling is pure arcade, and not in a good "pick up and play" way. Steering, throttle, and braking are all mapped to a single analog stick on a gamepad, which means up accelerates and down brakes. There is no manual transmission option at all, locked automatic only, and the AI opponents are so weak that reviewers have reported winning race after race on default truck setups without any tuning adjustments. The AI also has a habit of wandering off-track into the grass and spinning itself out on corners, which removes any sense of competition. Tracks do have pit lane entrances, but there are no pit crews and races are short enough that stopping is pointless. No damage model to speak of either: trucks bounce off walls and carry on. The bigger problem for anyone thinking about dropping time into this is a documented progression bug. Players have reported that after roughly ten races in Tour mode, the game locks on a blank "Tournament" screen and refuses to continue. The only known fix involves manually editing a Windows registry key. That is not a quirky inconvenience for a budget title from 2014 with no ongoing developer support. That is a broken core loop, and it should be the first thing you know before buying. Wheel and pedal support is listed, and controller input does work, but given that there is no manual gear shifting or meaningful physics depth there is zero reason to break out your racing hardware here. This is a gamepad-or-keyboard title at best. There is no multiplayer of any kind, split-screen or online, so the "is it fun for a group" question gets answered immediately: no, it is strictly solo, and the solo experience runs out of road very fast. If the truck racing itch is real, FIA European Truck Racing Championship is the game that actually scratches it with brake temperature management, tyre wear, and genuine sim-adjacent weight physics. World Truck Racing sits well below that bar. It has the seed of a fun idea, a niche vehicle class that deserves better treatment, but the execution is shallow, the AI is embarrassing, and an unpatched bug can wall you off from further progress without warning. Riley, Scout Team

World Truck Racing
Racing

World Truck Racing

Sep 16, 2014Homa DesignSIG Publishing
GamerScout Says

Truck racing sounds like a brilliant niche idea, but World Truck Racing squanders it with paper-thin AI, locked automatic transmissions, and a known tournament-breaking bug that requires a registry edit to fix.

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Screenshots & Media

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About World Truck Racing

I went into World Truck Racing genuinely excited, because close-contact truck racing is a legitimately fun motorsport concept that almost nobody covers in games. Two classes of big-rig cabs, 12 trucks total, 16 circuits inspired by real-world locations, four race modes, and a visual plus mechanical tuning garage on paper that sounds like a solid budget racer. The reality, unfortunately, is much thinner than the premise. The handling is pure arcade, and not in a good "pick up and play" way. Steering, throttle, and braking are all mapped to a single analog stick on a gamepad, which means up accelerates and down brakes. There is no manual transmission option at all, locked automatic only, and the AI opponents are so weak that reviewers have reported winning race after race on default truck setups without any tuning adjustments. The AI also has a habit of wandering off-track into the grass and spinning itself out on corners, which removes any sense of competition. Tracks do have pit lane entrances, but there are no pit crews and races are short enough that stopping is pointless. No damage model to speak of either: trucks bounce off walls and carry on. The bigger problem for anyone thinking about dropping time into this is a documented progression bug. Players have reported that after roughly ten races in Tour mode, the game locks on a blank "Tournament" screen and refuses to continue. The only known fix involves manually editing a Windows registry key. That is not a quirky inconvenience for a budget title from 2014 with no ongoing developer support. That is a broken core loop, and it should be the first thing you know before buying. Wheel and pedal support is listed, and controller input does work, but given that there is no manual gear shifting or meaningful physics depth there is zero reason to break out your racing hardware here. This is a gamepad-or-keyboard title at best. There is no multiplayer of any kind, split-screen or online, so the "is it fun for a group" question gets answered immediately: no, it is strictly solo, and the solo experience runs out of road very fast. If the truck racing itch is real, FIA European Truck Racing Championship is the game that actually scratches it with brake temperature management, tyre wear, and genuine sim-adjacent weight physics. World Truck Racing sits well below that bar. It has the seed of a fun idea, a niche vehicle class that deserves better treatment, but the execution is shallow, the AI is embarrassing, and an unpatched bug can wall you off from further progress without warning. Riley, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertier:sub-5Arcade RacingTruck RacingVehicle TuningSingleplayer OnlyNo MultiplayerGamepad FriendlyCareer ModeBudget TitleClose-Contact Racing

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP SP3 / Vista / 7 / 8
Memory
2048 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
1300 MB available space
Graphics
GeForce 9600GT or better w /256MB vram
Processor
Core 2 Duo 1.8GHz or AMD equivalent
Sound Card
DirectX 9 compatible

Recommended

OS
Windows XP SP3 / Vista / 7 / 8
Memory
4096 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
1300 MB available space
Graphics
1024 MB GeForce GTS 450 or Radeon equivalent
Processor
Core i5 or AMD equivalent
Sound Card
DirectX 9 compatible

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Game Info

Developer
Homa Design
Publisher
SIG Publishing
Release Date
Sep 16, 2014

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2026-06-100.69(lowest)

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What platforms is World Truck Racing available on?

World Truck Racing is available on PC.

When was World Truck Racing released?

World Truck Racing was released on 16 September 2014.

Who developed World Truck Racing?

World Truck Racing was developed by Homa Design and published by SIG Publishing.