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About Monster Tracks

I’ve been messing around with Monster Tracks lately, and it’s surprisingly addictive. The basic idea is that you get to design these crazy, loop-filled tracks and then watch oversized monster trucks thunder across them. There’s something oddly satisfying about tweaking a jump just a few pixels to nail that perfect mid-air spin, and the physics feel weighty enough that you can’t just slap together any old course without thinking it through.

What really hooks you is the customization. You start out with a basic truck and a handful of track pieces, but pretty soon you’re unlocking cool paint jobs, different suspension setups, and track tiles that do all sorts of wild things—booster pads, anti-gravity bends, even trapdoors that send you flying elsewhere on the map. If you like tweaking every little setting until it’s just right, Monster Tracks has you covered.

Playing against friends in real time is a blast too. You can challenge buddies to beat your custom courses or hop into ranked matches where everyone races the same track. Since the editor is so user-friendly, you’ll end up scrolling through a never-ending feed of community-made tracks that range from “I can’t even see where I’m going” chaotic disasters to surprisingly elegant precision runs.

All in all, it feels like a modern twist on classic stunt-racing games mixed with a dash of level-building joy. It’s perfect for a quick 10-minute session to unwind or for grinding out leaderboards to prove you’re the track master. If you’re into physics-based racers and love playing around with level design, Monster Tracks is definitely worth checking out.