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It ONLY cares about speed - reckless, unfiltered, sometimes-questionable speed.
Developer: BestCrazyGames
- 4.5
- Score
I twisted the throttle, flew past a traffic van at 140 km/h, narrowly missed a sedan changing lanes, and launched off a small hill that definitely wasn't meant to be a ramp. That's Motorcycle Racing 2022 in a nutshell. This game doesn't care about realism. It cares about speed - reckless, unfiltered, sometimes-questionable speed. You're not playing for simulation. You're here to feel the wind, dodge traffic, and maybe crash spectacularly a few times just to see how far your body will fly. And as low-budget as it looks in places, there's something undeniably fun about blasting through cars in a way that would give any insurance company a collective heart attack. The core gameplay is straightforward: you ride. Fast. The controls are responsive enough - arrow keys for direction, spacebar for brake, and throttle that doesn't believe in moderation. You're weaving between traffic, flying down straightaways, and trying not to crash into poorly textured SUVs that drift into your lane without warning. The environments change slightly - sometimes it's city roads, sometimes coastal highways - but they all serve the same purpose: narrow corridors for chaos. There's no map, no story, no upgrades - just raw reflexes and instinct. And honestly, that keeps things focused. You don't think about what comes next. You just react. Turn too late and you're sliding across four lanes of traffic. Time it right, and you feel like the coolest biker alive. What Motorcycle Racing 2022 lacks in polish, it makes up for with momentum. The sense of speed is solid, the crashes are hilariously dramatic, and the game never asks you to do anything but survive as long as possible. It's like the fast-food version of a racing sim - greasy, chaotic, but hits the spot when you need something fast and dumb. The visuals might be rough, and the physics a little too generous, but there's a guilty pleasure in watching your bike bounce off a guardrail and keep going like nothing happened. It's not trying to be beautiful. It just wants you to go fast, crash hard, and try again. And for five or ten minutes of reckless adrenaline, that's all it really needs to be.