![]() You can take your custom-made monster truck into all of those, too. Outside of the career, you can quickly create your own events against the CPU, throw your truck around in a training area, or jump into an online race. You can tune up your truck, too, with separate settings for race and trick-based events. While the customisation options aren’t exhaustive, there are enough to really make your monster truck your own. Complete championships and sponsorship challenges, however, and you unlock a variety of upgrades to purchase, as well as the cash to do so. You start out with a standard cab connected to four huge wheels that doesn’t perform all that well. The main draw is a single-player career in which you develop your own monster truck. Instead you have serious drag and circuit races, as well as freestyle and timed destruction events that still have spectacle, but truly test your truck-handling skills. It’s still preposterous by nature – how could it not be? – but the more ridiculous elements found in the likes of the Monster Jam game series are thrown out the window. Monster Truck Championship is that very rare thing – a monster truck simulator. It’s perhaps not entirely surprising, but given how little has been done or added when bringing the game to next-gen consoles, it’s very disappointing considering there’s no free upgrade path for existing owners. Now playing it on PS5, the case is exactly the same. Only its lacklustre multiplayer offerings let it down. We liked it, awarding it a score of 7/10, or “Good”. Just five months have passed by since we reviewed Monster Truck Championship on Xbox One. ![]() If you’re a fan of monster trucks yet didn’t pick up Monster Truck Championship when it launched on PS4, Xbox One, Switch and PC last year, there’s now a better option: picking it up on PS5 or Xbox Series X/S.
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