Reviews from

in the past


How do you come this close to making a cute, aesthetically fatnastic tribute to Virtua Racing only to fuck it up entirely with obnoxious, terrible voice acting punctuating every moment of gameplay, some wonky physics and drifting, and AI that rubber bands at the drop of a hat.

Virtua Racinng from 1993 is also legitimately more thrilling, fast, has better track design and is less obnoxious. Who the fuck thought giving a retro throwback racer more constant chatter than an ace combat final mission? (that repeats itself astonishingly quickly) was a good idea?

It has a saving grace in it's flat shaded, glorious aesthetic which really does feel like a great modernisation of Virtua Racing. Which makes it only worse when the Model 1 - style graphics make way for in-game advertisments for Curve Digital's other games. Yes, that is actually a thing, and no, now I have no intention of playing Snake Pass, what the fuck?

Fuck this. Just play the Virtua Racing port on Switch.

Hotshot Racing confirmed to me exactly what "rubberbanding" is in racing games.

Which is also to say, Hotshot Racing is an excellent racing game to experience incredibly aggressive levels of "rubberbanding."

A+ aesthetics though. Drifting feels good and going fast feels good. Pretty sure I got this for free somehow. Don't buy this.

With the success of their work on the Sonic All-Star Racing series, Sumo Digital has amassed a well of notoriety over the years. deservingly so as well, the All-Star Racing linage is representative of the apex of the kart racer genre-- not yet has another kart racer struck that same perfect harmony between pure, unadulterated chaos and deterministic, mechanical soundness. Owing to this legacy, many eyes were on their 2020 release, Hotshot Racing. However, Sumo Digital swiftly dashed all theories of their latest project being even tangentially related to their more recent backlog beyond the fact it's a racer. No, Hotshot Racing was something far more daring than All-Star Racing-- it's a small-scale collaboration between newborn indie studio Lucky Mountain Games that aims to revive a subgenre long dormant.

Arcade racers, a subgenre left in the dust by the annals of time. A subgenre welded tight between the more realistic, simulation-esque racers and the fantastical, off-the-wall kart racers. Sumo Digital was looking towards the likes of Daytona USA, Hard Drivin', and Winning Run. Its poppy, non-textured graphics do more than enough work harkening back to its forefathers, but to further drive its ambitions home the game interweaves an "easy to learn, hard to master" philosophy into every fabric of its design. Hotshot Racing is far from being the first aspiring indie project seeking to feel a hibernating niche though, far from it. Routinely, these works fall into the pitfall of faintly imitating their forefathers on a superficial level but failing to grasp how any of their core components culminate to form a cohesive whole.

Hotshot Racing kicks it off on the right foot, as on a presentation level it exhibits a level of greater nuance. Instead of simply deriving from its inspirations, Hotshot Racing contemplates the limitation affronted to those games due to computer hardware and decidedly takes the next step. The game's art direction is simply an evolution of other vertex racers featuring a more realized, animated world. The backdrop of each track is extensively animated and the game has four distinct biomes to boot. While these biomes share many of the same assets, each one holds hosts to their own signature locale and sometimes even sport different color palettes. The racers themselves are more individualized, each bearing their own costumes, backstory, ending sequence, and car selection. For the most dedicated players, you can even personalize each of the game's twenty-four cars. In a genre that thrives on the players that dedicate hundreds of hours optimizing their times, superfluous side-content such as this ends ensuring this niche audience will have content to further engross themselves into the game's universe.

Nevertheless, these charming aesthetical additions are of little importance in comparison to mechanical depth when it comes to securing longevity. The centerpiece of the game is the drifting mechanic. Drifting has a weighty, yet tangible handling to it. The reward to it is high; gracefully turning a corner not only maintains your speed but also charges your ever-vital boost gauge. However, the slightest error in your handling can be utterly devastating. It's a simple yet potent dynamic that lends itself to intricate mechanical exploration. On top of that, you have Hotshot Racing's diverse car selection. Its assortment of vehicles forms this nice sense of player expression by throwing a barrage of intriguing, meaningful variables into the mix. Do you want a higher acceleration so you can swiftly speed the competition? Do you want a more accurate drift so you can cut turns with pinpoint precision? Do you want a heightened top speed so you can bolt through the track in style? Or, do you want a mix of everything even?

Such mechanical refinement is worthy of being appreciated and its subtlety is amplified by Hotshot Racing's twenty assorted racetracks. There are five Grand Prixs, each of them journeying through the game's previously mentioned biomes in addition to three different "difficulty levels". These "difficulty levels" are less so representative of how brutally the AI will outpace and more so an indicator of what CC you will be racing at. The higher the CC, the more calamitous the smallest errors are. The track layouts themselves are far from being bombastic, but the delicate touch of Hotshot Racing's drifting mechanic keeps them feeling diversified. These courses act as a test of overall mechanical mastery, with each one slightly remixing itself in favor of one specific skill to spice things up. It gives the entire game this holistic feeling, and by extension further highlights player individuality. I adore how adamant Hotshot Racing is about being a laser-focused, expressive racing experience... which is why I find it astronomically disappointing how the game's balancing can't keep up with its diversity whatsoever.

The Time Trial leaderboard is dominated by a band of three cars out of an array of twenty-four. To be frank, it's terribly demoralizing to see all the time one invested cultivating their playstyle be thrown to the wayside due to unjust balancing. It would be disingenuous to say that these balancing issues are prominent on a casual level, I cleared each of the Grand Prixs on Expert before I even delve into Time Trial Mode. However, it cannot be understated how much this tipped scale spoils the game's longevity. When a majority of the roster pales in comparison to a small, select group of them, it accelerates the game's natural skill progression an unprecedented amount. When you're attempting to play to perfection, why explore the possibilities of the other vehicles that are ever so tremendously outclassed by their peers? It's no wonder the game has struggled to gain any semblance of a community, the game's solved. Only a small niche of players are going to dedicate the time to a racer to truly delve into this level of technicality, but considering the fact it's these same players that keep a game alive for years on end, it's devastating how shallow Hotshot Racing's skill pool is.

This leaves us with the game's aforementioned Grand Prixs and AIs, the latter of which holding host to their own bundle of issues and highlights yet another balancing issue. A common complaint with racers is their infamous rubber-banding AI, and I want to get it out and the way and say that is absolutely not the issue with the game. Rubber-banding AIs are cool, they lend way to a form of dynamic difficulty that gives racer this evergreen kind of content. What is a problem is how overtly aggressive they are. For some bizarre reason, the AI tends to hones into the player in an attempt to tailspin you. Mind you, going for a tailspin at Expert level speeds is a borderline infeasible task that yields high risk and little reward. Yet, the AI manages to accomplish the feat with pinpoint precision every single time they go for it. They not doing this as a desperate attempt to win the race, as doing a tailspin often causes you more speed than what it's worth-- no, they do it specifically to screw over you and only you. Even in Expert It's not impossible to come back from a tailspin, but that does not excuse how much it diminishes the value of skillful play. When you're only one unlucky tailspin away from losing all your progress, none of the race feels like it matters up till the very last lap.

Don't get me wrong however, these AI are still easily exploitable despite how much it seems like they hate you. There's a trick you can do to win every single Grand Prix with ease, and it applies to PvP races as well to an extent-- never get in first place. It is effectually impossible for the 1st-4th place AI to not be in close proximity of you as long as you're in the 2nd-4th place range yourself. So here's the gameplan: on the final lap, get into 2nd-4th place around the second half of the final lap. Then, right before the finish line, use the boost you accumulated to dash right past the competition. This works on every difficulty; the AI will never retaliate by boosting themselves, they will always surrender themselves and let you easily breeze past them. It doesn't even matter if you fail to accumulate the boost you need by drifting, by simply tailing behind another racer you build boost. This plays into 1st place being at disadvantage rather or not you're playing with the AI or your friends, slipstreaming is too strong of a comeback mechanic for genuine, skillful play to feel rewarded. This game's core racing is fundamentally broken to such an astonishing degree, the deeper I explored the game the more it felt like it was directly insulting me for trying to play to its expectations.

Once you've broken the Grand Prix Mode and gave up on the idea of competing in Time Trial, the game leaves you with a handful of additional casual modes. First, you have "Cops & Robbers", a mode in which you amass money by clearing checkpoints and ramming into other drivers. By virtue of this mode rewarding the same predatory aggression AIs exhibit in your standard race and the game's handling not being equipped to handle pinpoint aggression even halfway as well as the AI makes it out to be, this mode isn't all that fun. Then you have "Drive or Explode", a mode where you have to maintain a speed that is perpetually rising or, as the name says, you'll explode. Honestly it's by far the best mode the game has to offer; it stresses the game's fundamentals while lessening the value of obtaining first place. First place is still the chief victory condition, but the survivability aspect adds a real nice dynamic to it all. Finally, you have "Barrel Barrage", a mode where each racer is given a Mario Kart banana every time they pass a checkpoint. It's honestly not as chaotic as it sounds, you're still playing the same game and the AI isn't smart enough to strategically place barrels to begin with. Overall, outside of Drive or Explode, these modes are rather boring diversions at best and are far from being the fun, casual distractions they set out to be.

I've gathered a vast amount of respect for Sumo Digital over the years, so I admittedly went into Hotshot Racing with high hopes. While I initially considered the game a home-run, that initial high grew into confusion, and that confusion grew into frustration, and that frustration grew into apathy. Needless to say, Lucky Mountain Games and Sumo Digital missed the mark. I dunno which studio was the one leading development, but ultimately it doesn't matter. They were so close to clutching what makes arcade racers tick, but it instead holds a rudimentary grasp on what made its forefathers and other racers in general hold so much longevity. With it failing on the single-player front and failing on the hardcore front, I struggle to find the meaning of Hotshot Racing. No more what perspective you look at the game from, it's a fundamentally failed game that I cannot in good faith recommend. Maybe if you're looking for five or so hours of innocent fun I could say give it a shot, but the fact of the matter is Hotshot Racing is an unfortunate exemplification of one the most painful kind of games-- the more you try to love it, the more it hurts to play it.

(shoutouts to @shininghubee/@gunshoots1 on twitter for gifting me the game btw go watch goldran for them)

un juego de carreras arcade simple en cuanto a mecanicas y diseño, tiene unos escenarios hermosos y un par de modos de juego extra re copados como el modo bombas donde sos el bombas y si no vas rapido explotas.
lo malo es que si no jugas en experto, donde la dificultad y velocidad escalan casi de forma exponencial se podria decir, la IA es pelotuda y le ganas spameando el nitro pero bueno tomenlo con pinzas esto porque no soy ningun experto en carreras es mas una vez maneje el auto de mi papa y le arranque el espejito a un tipo estacionado y despues me fui a los pedo por la avenida si estas leyendo esto perdon amigo

Solid arcade racer with nice visuals and music. Not much else to say though and I don't see myself playing it more than the one GP I did, but it's not bad.

I think almost everyone owns this on PC by now due to how may times it's been bundled and given away lol


Mostly bought for my Son but I played a lot to unlock stuff for him. It's really fun, tight controls and some pretty random Tekken-esque characters "endings" which I was not expecting.

I didn't expect to give this my best multiplayer of the year on the GOTY event until i repeatedly smashed my friends into the walls which would squish them out of the map causing them to reset.

They were very displeased with me.

Really wanted to like this... The low poly visual style, inspired by Virtua Racing, help to clearly understand whats coming ahead which is something that I have trouble with more photorealistic racing games. Its biggest problems are the uninspired tracks (with few exceptions) and music. The tracks vary in four different zones (coast, desert, jungle and mountains) that get boring very quickly.

The Virtua Racing port on the Switch is very good, and would absolutely recommend it over this.

Ganhei todo o gran prix no normal e 2 fases no especialista, o qual é bem difícil.
Segue um estilo padrão de jogos de corrida mais arcade dos anos 90/00, mas poderiam inovar em algo, de diferencial só tem alguns modos de corrida divertidinhos mas que não acrescentam muito no final das contas.
No geral, até que dá para se divertir, mas não é nada memorável ou algo do tipo.

The rubberbanding is awful and the voice acting is honesty annoying. It plays okay enough, but the tracks are pretty bland

Not a bad imitation of older racing games, but it kinda sizzles out after a short while.

played just because of waterflame music, but actually enjoyed the mechanics

Um jogo pra passar o tempo sem muito compromisso. O jogo não oferece nada de mais, alguns carros diferentes, pistas diferentes, pilotos diferentes e cores diferentes.

Básicamente un Mario Kart low poly que te retrotrae a los grandes títulos de conducción arcade de los 90 y principios de milenio. Bastante bien.

cool retro art style the actual racing is fine

O melhor: O visual low-poly colorido é muito bonito
O pior: Rubberbanding absurdo da CPU e o deserto que é o modo online
Peça rara: Triste ver como jogos de corrida arcade andam em extinção

Hotshot Racing é um jogo de corrida arcade que remete bastante a clássicos como Daytona USA e Ridge Racer. É bem clara a proposta do jogo e eu acho que, na maior parte, ele consegue executar bem o seu papel. A estética low-poly foi uma ótima escolha, se por um lado não há tanta variedade visual nos carros, as pistas são cheias de detalhes e bem coloridas. Os controles são o que você espera de um jogo do tipo, bastante foco em drift para encher sua barra de turbo, e num geral funcionam muito bem, dando uma boa sensação de controle do carro.

O modo principal Grand Prix consiste em diferentes competições com quatro corridas cada, e o bom é que mesmo no nível Expert é possível conquistar o troféu de ouro sem necessariamente ter que chegar em primeiro nas quatro corridas. Isso é importante porque, principalmente na dificuldade mais alta, o rubberbanding é muito perceptível. O atributo de velocidade do seu carro parece ser irrelevante nessas horas, pois qualquer adversário pode te ultrapassar quando bem entender, e é meio ridículo quando você vê um outro carro um pouco mais a frente, usa um turbo e a distância permanece a mesma. É difícil entender o porquê disso, eu pelo menos considero esse tipo de desafio mais desanimador do que empolgante.

O jogo também conta com modos extras além dos tradicionais Arcade e Time Trial, como um modo polícia e ladrão e algo mais parecido com Mario Kart, só que com apenas barris explosivos. Esses modos enjoam rápido jogando contra a CPU, mas podem divertir num multiplayer, se você tiver alguém para jogar local. Infelizmente, o online de Hotshot Racing está bem abandonado, o que é uma pena pois o desafio contra outros jogadores poderia ser bem mais interessante do que contra a CPU.

Pela pouca oferta de títulos recentes desse gênero, e pelo preço ridiculamente baixo que é possível encontrá-lo, acho que vale uma conferida. Principalmente se o multiplayer local for uma opção.

Bom jogo de corrida arcade, tá no nível do Horizon Chase, mas com level design mais elaborado. Geralmente fica bem barato na Steam, então eu recomendo pra quem gosta de jogo de carrinho

For better or (mainly) worse, Hotshot Racing goes all in on the aesthetic and looks just like an early 90s arcade racer. Unfortunately there isn't much else on offer - bland track layouts, seriously underwhelming game modes and some very dodgy stereotypes for most of the characters are obvious blemishes, but the rubber-banded AI is probably the worst part of the package.

I don't mind a game keeping things semi-interesting in a race against the computer but the AI just does not let you escape which would be okay if it weren't for the fact that they slow down so hard if you fall even slightly behind.

I really like the tracks and the mechanics but the single player campaign is over very quickly and there is no-one left online playing it. It’s a shame as it feels like it would be great with other players and there are a fair few different modes on offer.

Lucky Mountain Games, Curve Digital, and Sumo Nottingham have created a superb arcade racer that pays homage to the beloved Sega racing games of the past. While I haven't played those games myself, I must confess, I can still confidently say that it is a well-crafted and fun as hell experience in its own right with tight controls, good track design, and the colorful low poly visuals that give the game a ton of personality.

My only major complaint with this game is that the voice lines in races were really annoying or so repetitive that I had to eventually turn them off. It's a shame because I genuinely enjoy the announcer's voice. For just 20 dollars, I strongly recommend getting this package, and it's an incredible deal if it goes on sale. If you're seeking an arcade racer that can be enjoyed without investing too much time into it, this is the game for you.

Absolutely nails the aesthetic it's going for, and plays great. Races actually feel like races, positions constantly changing, gotta push hard and concentrate, there's no getting out front and just coasting to victory here. Satisfyingly free of gimmicks too, just cool cars dancing around each other to see who's the best.

until st. petersburg, fl gets an arcade with initial d on it i'm going to have to settle for customizing keiko's drift specialty car into looking like the ae86

Daytona USA meets Virtua Racing meets modern games. This racing game makes really good use of modern quality of life improvements and applies an old school Sega arcade aesthetic to the graphics.

The main racing gameplay characteristic is that drifting is an essential part of the races since they increase the boost meter, allowing for an interesting mechanic that forces the players to take drift turns at high speeds.

Overall, a solid arcade-y racing game.

Building up the boosts by drifting, it’s a great mechanic reminiscent of the Ridge Racer series, which I love. Where this game fails is the flat visuals. It’s too clean and lacking in character. It’s not cartoony, or stylish, it’s like a corporate training video assets racing game. Wish there were some night time tracks as well. The brightness is overwhelming especially because I like to play before bed.


it only lasted me about an hour before i won every event on expert but i still dont regret buying it

The best way to describe this game is to essentially take Mario Kart and remove the powerups, memorable characters, and well-designed levels. The only thing Hotshot Racing has going on for it is that the driving model itself is okay and the simplistic look fits.

It's a strangely fun game for something that seems so simple, the only issue I had with it was really the boost gain that sometimes feels like is barely there, even though it isn't, it's just really slow. Otherwise even the music is pretty decent.

Another racing game. I can barely distinguish it from Horizon Chase Turbo. This one might have even fewer edges, because its art direction is not as good. I really don't know.