Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing on Steam - User reviews, Price & Information

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Get ready for some brake jamm'in, CB talk'in, convoy roll'in action across America! From Portland Oregon to Miami Florida, you'll be hauling loads and trying to stay one step ahead of the law as you climb into your Big Rig for non-stop driving action.

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing is a psychological horror, racing and memes game developed by Stellar Stone and published by Margarite Entertainment.
Released on April 08th 2025 is available only on Windows in 14 languages: English, French, Italian, German, Spanish - Spain, Russian, Japanese, Polish, Simplified Chinese, Portuguese - Brazil, Portuguese - Portugal, Spanish - Latin America, Arabic and Korean.

It has received 388 reviews of which 307 were positive and 81 were negative resulting in a rating of 7.4 out of 10. 😊

The game is currently priced at 5.89€ on Steam, but you can find it for 1.90€ on Eneba.


The Steam community has classified Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing into these genres:

Media & Screenshots

Get an in-depth look at Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing through various videos and screenshots.

System requirements

These are the minimum specifications needed to play the game. For the best experience, we recommend that you verify them.

Windows
  • OS: Windows 10
  • Processor: 1 gigahertz (GHz) or faster processor or SoC.
  • Memory: 1 GB RAM
  • Graphics: Intel HD Graphics 500 (Gen9)
  • Storage: 400 MB available space
  • Sound Card: DirectX Compatible Sound Card

User reviews & Ratings

Explore reviews from Steam users sharing their experiences and what they love about the game.

Dec. 2025
This is one of the best games I have ever played. Still not as good as BRAZILLIAN DRUG DEALER 3: I OPENED A PORTAL TO HELL IN THE FAVELA TRYING TO REVIVE MIT AIA I NEED TO CLOSE IT though.
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Nov. 2025
This game is great to sit back and relax, especially reversing your truck at the speed of light.
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Nov. 2025
Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing has earned a reputation so extreme that its notoriety eclipses nearly every aspect of its intended design. What was marketed as a high-adrenaline trucking racer, complete with illegal cargo runs, police evasion, and competitive opponents, instead arrives as a bizarrely unfinished experiment that feels more like a forgotten tech demo than a retail product. The gap between what the game promised and what it delivered is staggering, and it forms the core of its strange, enduring legacy. Once the title boots up, you immediately sense something is off: menus are barebones, options are limited, and the game world has the hollow quality of something assembled at the last minute. Even before touching the wheel, you feel like you’re stepping into a digital ghost town. The moment the race begins, it becomes clear why Big Rigs is often described as one of the most broken games ever commercially sold. Your supposed rival truck never moves an inch, leaving every event an uncontested victory. Tracks are loosely sketched environments with mismatched assets, floating objects, incomplete geometry, and vast stretches of terrain that give way to the void beyond the playable world. The physics system is almost nonexistent, allowing your truck to drive straight through buildings, mountains, trees, or even the edges of the map without resistance. Reverse acceleration becomes a parody of game design, letting you blast into infinite speed instantly, while forward motion barely resembles real driving. Bridges don’t support weight, collisions don’t register, and the truck glides across the landscape like a ghostly placeholder in a world that was never finished. Even when simply exploring the maps, the strangeness deepens. Roads lead to nowhere, textures stretch unnaturally, and props sit in bizarre arrangements as though they were dropped into place without any thought for realism or function. Not a single system in the game behaves as it should. Objectives mentioned on the box—hauling cargo, dodging law enforcement, navigating realistic challenges—exist only in marketing copy. There is no cargo, no police, no win condition beyond crossing an unmarked finish line, and even that barely registers. Instead, you are rewarded with the now-iconic “YOU’RE WINNER!” success screen, a perfectly accidental summary of the entire experience: grammatically wrong, visually crude, and completely out of place. Yet despite its catastrophic flaws, Big Rigs has an undeniable magnetism. Part of it comes from the sheer audacity of its unfinished state, and part comes from the surreal, often hilarious situations that arise from its lack of rules. Watching the truck scale vertical cliffs like a mountain goat, driving backwards at unlimited velocity, or phasing into buildings without slowing down turns the game into a comedy showcase rather than a racing challenge. For some players, it’s a curiosity—something so misguided that it becomes entertaining in ways the developers almost certainly never imagined. Over time, the game has achieved a strange cult status, becoming a symbol of what happens when a project is released without quality control or oversight. Ultimately, Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing functions less as a traditional game and more as a cultural artifact of failure. It stands as a reminder of the importance of testing, design consistency, and developer commitment. It sets a benchmark for how low a commercial release can fall, yet paradoxically has become far more memorable and discussed than many competent racing titles of the same era. Big Rigs is impossible to recommend as a genuine racing experience, but as a piece of gaming folklore—an infamous monument to unfinished ideas—it is unforgettable. If you approach it not as a game to win, but as a spectacle of collapsed development, you may find an oddly compelling charm in its chaos. Rating: 7/10
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July 2025
It isn’t a crypto miner, it’s just running in a badly made UE5 wrapper that will take whatever computer resources you have. Speaking as a successful ex miner of 5-6 years here, even if this did contain a miner, then the profit would be a tiny fraction of minimum wage per hour if we use the average spec on the Steam Hardware Survey combined with the amount of players. Literal pennies. Almost no one would mine on desktop-class hardware anymore - **it’s not even worth it for those with bad intentions.** Even back in the day, mining on standard desktops with a single GPU was barely worth it unless the hardware had a very quick return on investment. Anyway, should you buy it? No. Is it entertaining for 30 minutes? Yes, you'll get all the achievements in that time too, and you know what I’m implying by that. I highly recommend running this in Linux, because it temporarily screws up Windows pretty badly due to the wrapper/launcher and a “quit” button that doesn’t really/properly close the program.
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May 2025
It's a bad game that's unfinished but the truck being able to go a million miles per hour in reverse will never fail to make me laugh
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Frequently Asked Questions

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing is currently priced at 5.89€ on Steam.

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing is currently not on sale. You can purchase it for 5.89€ on Steam.

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing received 307 positive votes out of a total of 388 achieving a rating of 7.43.
😊

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing was developed by Stellar Stone and published by Margarite Entertainment.

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing is playable and fully supported on Windows.

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing is not playable on MacOS.

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing is not playable on Linux.

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing is a single-player game.

There are 2 DLCs available for Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing. Explore additional content available for Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing on Steam.

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing does not support mods via Steam Workshop.

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing does not support Steam Remote Play.

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing is enabled for Steam Family Sharing. This means you can share the game with authorized users from your Steam Library, allowing them to play it on their own accounts. For more details on how the feature works, you can read the original Steam Family Sharing announcement or visit the Steam Family Sharing user guide and FAQ page.

You can find solutions or submit a support ticket by visiting the Steam Support page for Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing.

Data sources

The information presented on this page is sourced from reliable APIs to ensure accuracy and relevance. We utilize the Steam API to gather data on game details, including titles, descriptions, prices, and user reviews. This allows us to provide you with the most up-to-date information directly from the Steam platform.

Additionally, we incorporate data from the SteamSpy API, which offers insights into game sales and player statistics. This helps us present a comprehensive view of each game's popularity and performance within the gaming community.

Last Updates
Steam data 27 April 2026 11:36
SteamSpy data 23 April 2026 11:59
Steam price 29 April 2026 04:58
Steam reviews 29 April 2026 05:59

If you'd like to dive deeper into the details about Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing, we invite you to check out a few dedicated websites that offer extensive information and insights. These platforms provide valuable data, analysis, and user-generated reports to enhance your understanding of the game and its performance.

  • SteamDB - A comprehensive database of everything on Steam about Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing
  • SteamCharts - Analysis of Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing concurrent players on Steam
  • ProtonDB - Crowdsourced reports on Linux and Steam Deck Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing compatibility
Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing
Rating
7.4
307
81
Game modes
Features
Online players
0
Developer
Stellar Stone
Publisher
Margarite Entertainment
Release 08 Apr 2025
Platforms
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