Urban Trial Freestyle on Steam - User reviews, Price & Information

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The city is your playground! Nothing will stop you on your freestyle trials bike. Use the urban landscape to pull spectacular tricks - backflips, 360s, wallrides, ollies, and more. Customize your bike to boost your performance in Time Attack or Stunt mode. Choose between speed and style, developing your own unique riding style.

Urban Trial Freestyle is a racing, sports and action game developed and published by Tate Multimedia.
Released on September 18th 2013 is available only on Windows in 7 languages: English, French, Italian, German, Spanish - Spain, Polish and Russian.

It has received 1,665 reviews of which 1,380 were positive and 285 were negative resulting in a rating of 7.9 out of 10. 😊

The game is currently priced at 6.99€ on Steam, but you can find it for less on Gamivo.


The Steam community has classified Urban Trial Freestyle into these genres:

Media & Screenshots

Get an in-depth look at Urban Trial Freestyle 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 XP SP2, Vista, 7, 8
  • Processor: Intel Core®2 Duo or AMD Athlon 64
  • Memory: 2 GB RAM
  • Graphics: Nvidia GeForce 8800 or AMD Radeon HD 4650 with 512 MB video memory
  • Storage: 1 GB available space

User reviews & Ratings

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

Jan. 2026
Not as good mechanically as Ubisoft Trials Biking games, still a really fun game. The levels are all interesting and well designed. And the ghost of your past run really helps when going for those 5 stars on all the levels. Enjoyed it all the way!!
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Nov. 2025
Urban Trial Freestyle is a compact but energetic motorcycle stunt game that focuses squarely on momentum, timing, and the thrill of navigating chaotic urban environments. Built around short, skill-based challenges, it presents a straightforward premise: hop on a stunt bike, race through obstacle-filled cityscapes, land impossible jumps, and push your precision riding to the limit. At its core, the game embraces arcade sensibilities. There is no need for story context, character development, or elaborate worldbuilding—the experience is meant to be immediate and mechanical, throwing you into fast restarts, explosive set-pieces, and a play-die-retry loop that encourages repeated attempts. This structure makes Urban Trial Freestyle instantly accessible, even to players unfamiliar with the trials subgenre, while still demanding enough finesse to keep perfectionists chasing better times and higher stunt scores. The game’s urban setting is not simply a backdrop but an integral part of the track design. Courses wind through collapsing highways, dimly lit construction yards, graffiti-filled backstreets, and rooftops strewn with debris. Each level is built around a blend of ramps, breakable structures, seesaw platforms, moving machinery, and hazards that blur the line between environmental storytelling and mechanical challenge. The visual tone leans gritty and industrial, but never so dark that the game loses its playful energy. Explosions, shifting structures, and exaggerated physics add to the spectacle, ensuring that each stunt feels dramatic—even when the crash that follows is inevitable. Although the visual fidelity varies and some environments reuse elements, the overall atmosphere fits the game’s identity: chaotic urban playgrounds begging to be conquered one wheelie and barrel-roll at a time. Gameplay is divided into two major variants—time trials and stunt challenges—each of which emphasizes a different aspect of bike control. Time-based runs demand clean lines, perfectly timed acceleration, and efficient movement across obstacles. Stunt-focused stages, on the other hand, encourage experimentation: long jumps, flips, mid-air balancing, and controlled collisions all contribute to your score. This structure gives each track multiple layers of engagement. Even when you finish a stage once, you can return to chase better scores, collect hidden bags of money, or aim for full-star completion by landing tougher tricks. The physics are intentionally exaggerated but remain grounded enough to reward skill; a slight tilt backward or forward can be the difference between a flawless run and a painful wipeout. Where the game stumbles is in overall progression and consistency. While the early courses are approachable and fun, later stages begin relying on harsher hazards, precision jumps, and trial-and-error design that may frustrate even seasoned players. Some obstacles feel like artificial difficulty spikes rather than natural extensions of the mechanics, and the difference between a fair failure and a cheap one can occasionally blur. The upgrade system, meanwhile, adds incremental improvements to your bike’s engine, chassis, and wheels, but the sense of progression is uneven. Upgrades help with later challenges, yet they also introduce a mild grind as players revisit earlier tracks to gather the currency needed to unlock better parts. This repetition can reduce the variety of the experience, especially since several levels share similar layouts across stunt and time-trial variants. Despite its limitations, Urban Trial Freestyle succeeds in delivering an addictive flow that appeals to players who enjoy refining their runs. The game is at its best when you fall into its rhythm—accelerating at just the right moment, tilting into a perfect landing, and clearing a difficult section with a sense of mastery that feels earned. Its quick restarts ensure that failure never feels punishing, and even short play sessions provide a satisfying burst of challenge. While it lacks the polish, depth, and variety of the highest-profile trials titles, it carves out its own niche as a more casual, less intimidating alternative that still rewards skillful play. In the end, Urban Trial Freestyle is a modest but enjoyable stunt-bike experience that delivers exactly what it sets out to provide: fast, physics-driven challenges wrapped in a gritty, urban aesthetic. It may not innovate or surprise, and its difficulty curve and repetition hold it back from being exceptional, yet it remains fun in short bursts and offers enough content to keep fans of arcade-style riding entertained. Players seeking a simple, energetic stunt experience with a focus on mastering tracks rather than exploring worlds will find it a solid, if imperfect, ride. Rating: 8/10
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Sept. 2025
Not the greatest game but hey its Fun for a short time and its not expensiv.
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July 2025
Inspired by 2000s trend of similar games, especially mobile ones, like Gravity Defied, this game is pretty basic in its formula but still is very fun even today.
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Jan. 2025
Well, I did rage a lot with this game, but it was only because I was aiming for 5 stars in every level. The physics sometimes are not accurate, which gets in the way of the gameplay. Hitboxes are also a bit broken once in a while. However, I enjoyed all the animations placed in the background of each level - some can even distract you so beware! For someone looking for a simple bike parkour game without aiming to get/unlock everything, this game is good. Reminds me of the old browser games I played when I was younger :D PS: Dear achievement hunters, good luck.
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Frequently Asked Questions

Urban Trial Freestyle is currently priced at 6.99€ on Steam.

Urban Trial Freestyle is currently not on sale. You can purchase it for 6.99€ on Steam.

Urban Trial Freestyle received 1,380 positive votes out of a total of 1,665 achieving a rating of 7.94.
😊

Urban Trial Freestyle was developed and published by Tate Multimedia.

Urban Trial Freestyle is playable and fully supported on Windows.

Urban Trial Freestyle is not playable on MacOS.

Urban Trial Freestyle is not playable on Linux.

Urban Trial Freestyle is a single-player game.

Urban Trial Freestyle does not currently offer any DLC.

Urban Trial Freestyle does not support mods via Steam Workshop.

Urban Trial Freestyle does not support Steam Remote Play.

Urban Trial Freestyle 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 Urban Trial Freestyle.

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 17 January 2026 07:24
SteamSpy data 22 January 2026 22:51
Steam price 28 January 2026 20:44
Steam reviews 27 January 2026 13:57

If you'd like to dive deeper into the details about Urban Trial Freestyle, 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 Urban Trial Freestyle
  • SteamCharts - Analysis of Urban Trial Freestyle concurrent players on Steam
  • ProtonDB - Crowdsourced reports on Linux and Steam Deck Urban Trial Freestyle compatibility
Urban Trial Freestyle PEGI 12
Rating
7.9
1,380
285
Game modes
Features
Online players
0
Developer
Tate Multimedia
Publisher
Tate Multimedia
Release 18 Sep 2013
Platforms
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