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It's trying to make you grin like a kid with a toy motorcycle and a living room full of pillows.
Developer: RHM Interactive OU
- 4.6
- Score
There's something oddly entertaining about watching someone fling a high-performance motorcycle off a skyscraper and land perfectly on a shipping container. That's how my first five minutes with City Bike Stunt 2 felt - like I'd accidentally wandered into a stunt rider's chaotic highlight reel. Whether you're speeding through time trials or just goofing around in the Free Riding map, this game thrives on spectacle. There are ramps, loops, vertical walls, and those "should this even be possible?" kind of jumps that make you gasp and laugh at the same time. And yes, I started by watching a friend play. Ten minutes later, I had the controller. There was no turning back. The structure splits into two distinct experiences: Racing and Free Riding. In Racing mode, it's you versus the clock across wild stunt courses where speed matters, but precision saves your life. You'll fail. A lot. But you'll also learn how to drift on the edge of physics and somehow make it look cool. Meanwhile, Free Riding is a playground built for chaos - collecting diamonds, experimenting with jumps, or just cruising with no pressure. The diamonds you grab there become currency for new bikes and upgrades in the Garage, where you can customize your machine's look and performance. Some bikes feel smooth and responsive, others like rocket-powered bricks, but that's part of the discovery. There's also a 2 Player mode, which quickly turns into a competition of "who can crash in the most dramatic way." What keeps City Bike Stunt 2 fun is its total lack of shame. It knows it's over-the-top and embraces it. The bikes are fast, the courses are unhinged, and the sense of momentum is addictive. Even when you're crashing (which, let's be honest, is most of the time), it still feels good. And those little bursts of triumph - clearing a near-impossible ramp, unlocking a new ride, or simply sticking a landing you had no business surviving - make you want to jump back in. It's not trying to be a realistic racing sim. It's trying to make you grin like a kid with a toy motorcycle and a living room full of pillows. And on that front, it absolutely delivers.