HOT WHEELS UNLEASHED 2 โ€“ Turbocharged review for PC, Nintendo Switch, Xbox, PlayStation

Platform: PC
Also on: Xbox Series X, Xbox One, PS4, PS5, Nintendo Switch
Publisher: Milestone
Developer: Milestone
Medium: Digital/Disc/Cartridge
Players: 1-12
Online: Yes
ESRB: E

It should come as no surprise that Hot Wheels Unleashed 2 โ€“ Turbocharged is a pretty solid racing game. After all, it was developed and published by Milestone, the studio that basically exists to make racing games, and it comes on the heels of the first Hot Wheels Unleashed, which was pretty decent in its own right. With that kind of base, it wouldโ€™ve been hard to mess anything up โ€“ and, of course, it doesnโ€™t.

But that doesnโ€™t mean that there arenโ€™t notable areas where Hot Wheels Unleashed 2 couldnโ€™t improve โ€“ and that starts with the same area where the first Hot Wheels Unleashed couldโ€™ve improved, which was that the whole game often felt like one big ad. Not for Hot Wheels, mind you (though it obviously is that), but rather, it regularly feels like the game โ€“ you know, the one that youโ€™ve already spent money on โ€“ canโ€™t stop trying to push you to spend even more.

Like the cars in the game? โ€œTheyโ€™re fine and all,โ€ it often feels like the game is saying, โ€œbut youโ€™ll like these paid DLC packs even more, since theyโ€™re so much better than the ones in the base game.โ€ The same goes for the tracks: there may be a healthy number of tracks to race through in the story mode, but the game really wants you to know that there are expansions to buy thatโ€™ll get you even more tracks.

Of course, the obvious solution is just to buy both of the gameโ€™s season passes โ€“ a steal at a mere $10 more than the price of the game. With a bargain like that, who wouldnโ€™t want to effectively pay for the game twice? (Thatโ€™s sarcasm, in case you need it spelled out.)

Setting aside the issue of DLC, itโ€™s important to note that if youโ€™re buying Hot Wheels Unleashed 2, you shouldnโ€™t buy it with any expectation of racing online. Thereโ€™s virtually no multiplayer base to speak of, so all those extra dollars you spend will be strictly for solo play.

The good news is that Hot Wheels Unleashed 2 offers a pretty fun single-player experience. Thereโ€™s a lengthy story mode that allows you to zip through a nice variety of tracks and challenges, so rather than just doing race after race, there are also time trials and eliminator races to test your mettle. And, since this is Milestone, the cars handle well and you face just the right amount of challenge from the AI racers (which is good because, again, online is more or less dead).

But itโ€™s hard to recommend Hot Wheels Unleashed 2 without acknowledging that big DLC-shaped elephant in the corner. Itโ€™s not as bad as, say, the NBA 2K series or any others like it that are effectively pay-to-win, but itโ€™s enough that it could put a damper on your enjoyment of an otherwise fun game. That said, if you can ignore the DLC push and just want a flashy racer, this will deliver on that.

Milestone provided us with a HOT WHEELS UNLEASHED 2 โ€“ Turbocharged PC code for review purposes.

Grade: 7
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