Compare Xpand Rally Xtreme prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Techland. Published by Techland. Released on 10/8/2008. Available on PC. Genres: Racing.

A budget-priced old-school rally game that sits between arcade fun and proper sim punishment - pick arcade mode, buckle up, and enjoy the chaos while it lasts.

I'll be straight with you: I came into Xpand Rally Xtreme expecting a dusty relic, and I left with a grudging respect for what Techland pulled off on a shoestring. This is a rally game that genuinely tries to land between the accessibility of arcade racers and the tooth-grinding difficulty of proper sims, and it mostly succeeds on both counts. Arcade mode is more demanding than you'd expect from that label, while simulation mode is a touch more forgiving than a pure physics beast - which means there's actually an on-ramp for players who've never touched a rally game before, and a ceiling for those who want to hurt themselves. The car roster covers four classes: M1, AC, WRL, and the top-tier Xtreme category, plus two bonus modes built around 4x4 off-road machines and high-powered GT and DTM touring cars on flat circuits. That's a reasonable spread. The career structure is simple: win races, earn cash, fix your car, buy upgrades, unlock the next block of events. You're not managing a team calendar or watching cutscenes - you just race. Sessions are short enough to chip away at in half-hour bursts, which I genuinely appreciate in a game this age. The 40-plus tracks pull from locations including Malaysia, China, Italy, Japan, and the USA, mixing dirt, gravel, tarmac, and sand across rally stages, off-road checkpoint runs, and closed-circuit battles. Damage here has real teeth. Take too many hits and your driver's hearing degrades, which means you can't properly gauge the engine note for manual gear changes and have to keep glancing at the rev counter mid-corner. Your co-pilot's pace notes are functional and keep your eyes forward rather than hunting a minimap - though the delivery lacks the dramatic punch rally veterans will remember from competing titles of the era. The track surfaces constantly shift the handling feel: wet grass, loose gravel, and rain at night all pile on. A few critics pointed out that cranking the engine upgrades too high outpaces the handling improvements, so the upgrade curve gets a bit wobbly at the top end. Fair warning. Here is the big caveat for anyone buying this for a group session: there is no split-screen, full stop. Online servers have been dead for years, and as of late 2024, official online support was formally dropped. LAN play for up to eight players technically exists in the code, but you are on your own to get it working. This is a solo experience in practice. On the compatibility front, the StarForce DRM can require a manual driver update to run properly on Windows 10 or 11 - PCGamingWiki has the fix, and it is not hard, but it is a hoop. Gamepad support works well; the game was reviewed with an Xbox controller at launch and it handled cleanly without fiddling. For the sub-five-dollar price tag it regularly sits at, Xpand Rally Xtreme is a focused, no-frills rally fix that rewards short sessions and doesn't overstay its welcome. It is not a modern rally game, the graphics show their age hard, and if you are a hardcore sim head who lives in Richard Burns Rally, you will probably find the physics a bit soft. But as a compact, chunky career mode with genuine track variety and a proper dual-mode difficulty setup, it punches above its weight class for the money. Riley, Scout Team

Xpand Rally Xtreme
Racing

Xpand Rally Xtreme

Oct 8, 2008Techland
GamerScout Says

A budget-priced old-school rally game that sits between arcade fun and proper sim punishment - pick arcade mode, buckle up, and enjoy the chaos while it lasts.

PC
Best Price Available
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Historical low: $2.49

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Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Xpand Rally Xtreme

I'll be straight with you: I came into Xpand Rally Xtreme expecting a dusty relic, and I left with a grudging respect for what Techland pulled off on a shoestring. This is a rally game that genuinely tries to land between the accessibility of arcade racers and the tooth-grinding difficulty of proper sims, and it mostly succeeds on both counts. Arcade mode is more demanding than you'd expect from that label, while simulation mode is a touch more forgiving than a pure physics beast - which means there's actually an on-ramp for players who've never touched a rally game before, and a ceiling for those who want to hurt themselves. The car roster covers four classes: M1, AC, WRL, and the top-tier Xtreme category, plus two bonus modes built around 4x4 off-road machines and high-powered GT and DTM touring cars on flat circuits. That's a reasonable spread. The career structure is simple: win races, earn cash, fix your car, buy upgrades, unlock the next block of events. You're not managing a team calendar or watching cutscenes - you just race. Sessions are short enough to chip away at in half-hour bursts, which I genuinely appreciate in a game this age. The 40-plus tracks pull from locations including Malaysia, China, Italy, Japan, and the USA, mixing dirt, gravel, tarmac, and sand across rally stages, off-road checkpoint runs, and closed-circuit battles. Damage here has real teeth. Take too many hits and your driver's hearing degrades, which means you can't properly gauge the engine note for manual gear changes and have to keep glancing at the rev counter mid-corner. Your co-pilot's pace notes are functional and keep your eyes forward rather than hunting a minimap - though the delivery lacks the dramatic punch rally veterans will remember from competing titles of the era. The track surfaces constantly shift the handling feel: wet grass, loose gravel, and rain at night all pile on. A few critics pointed out that cranking the engine upgrades too high outpaces the handling improvements, so the upgrade curve gets a bit wobbly at the top end. Fair warning. Here is the big caveat for anyone buying this for a group session: there is no split-screen, full stop. Online servers have been dead for years, and as of late 2024, official online support was formally dropped. LAN play for up to eight players technically exists in the code, but you are on your own to get it working. This is a solo experience in practice. On the compatibility front, the StarForce DRM can require a manual driver update to run properly on Windows 10 or 11 - PCGamingWiki has the fix, and it is not hard, but it is a hoop. Gamepad support works well; the game was reviewed with an Xbox controller at launch and it handled cleanly without fiddling. For the sub-five-dollar price tag it regularly sits at, Xpand Rally Xtreme is a focused, no-frills rally fix that rewards short sessions and doesn't overstay its welcome. It is not a modern rally game, the graphics show their age hard, and if you are a hardcore sim head who lives in Richard Burns Rally, you will probably find the physics a bit soft. But as a compact, chunky career mode with genuine track variety and a proper dual-mode difficulty setup, it punches above its weight class for the money. Riley, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayertier:sub-5Arcade/Sim Dual ModeCareer ProgressionDamage ModelCo-Driver Pace NotesLAN MultiplayerNo Split-ScreenController FriendlyBudget PickOld-School Rally

Steam Deck & Linux

ProtonDB Platinum

Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 6 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

Sound
DirectX 8.0 compliant sound device
Memory
256MB RAM
Graphics
Graphics card with 128MB, DX 9.0 compatible (GeForce FX 5700 or ATI Radeon 9600)
Processor
P4/AMD Athlon processor with 1.8GHz
Hard Drive
2 GB
Supported OS
Windows 2000/XP/Vista
DirectX Version
DirectX 9.0c

Recommended

Sound
Direct X 8.0 compliant
Memory
512MB RAM
Graphics
Graphics card with 128MB, DX 9.0c compatible (GeForce 6600GT or ATI Radeon 9800)
Processor
P4/AMD Athlon processor with 2.5GHz
Hard Drive
2 GB free hard disk space
Supported OS
Windows XP/Vista
DirectX Version
DirectX 9.0c

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
Techland
Publisher
Techland
Release Date
Oct 8, 2008

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Price History

2026-06-102.49(lowest)

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What platforms is Xpand Rally Xtreme available on?

Xpand Rally Xtreme is available on PC.

When was Xpand Rally Xtreme released?

Xpand Rally Xtreme was released on 8 October 2008.

Who developed Xpand Rally Xtreme?

Xpand Rally Xtreme was developed by Techland.