Art of Rally leans on a stylised top-down view and pastel landscapes that soothe even as they blur past. The drift-focused handling rewards finesse, and the lo-fi soundtrack fits like a glove. A contemplative rally that stays just demanding enough.
Your verdict
Category
Racing1 player3+
Description
You string together rally stages on stylised top-down courses across the sport's great eras. Published by Funselektor, released worldwide in 2021. Demanding yet clean driving, stylised crashes, stages inspired by real places and a soothing minimalist look.
Art of Rally review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
4/5
Music
★★★★★
"Excellent"
1/5
Story
★★★★★
"Anecdotal"
Low-poly minimalism of rare elegance: pared-down cars, stylised landscapes bathed in warm light and fixed cameras worthy of a postcard. This graphic restraint, a world away from photorealism, turns every race into a contemplative, soothing tableau.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
Driving from a top-down view across clean, stylised landscapes turns rally into something almost meditative. Slides settle gently, the distant camera lends perspective on your line, and the soothing soundtrack breeds calm focus rather than tension. You replay a stage just for the pleasure of a clean run, won over by a minimalist elegance that simply doesn't age.
Rally isn't gaming's most crowded arena, and this stripped-down title makes it far more approachable than you'd think. Seen from above and pared to the bone, it still keeps real driving demands and a soothing clarity, backed by stages drawn from real places and eras. Stuck on the fringes outside enthusiast circles, it's worth the detour for its meditative mood, perfect for anyone who wants to drive without pressure.
Is Art of Rally still worth playing in 2026?
Art of Rally cultivates a rare elegance. Its stylised top-down view and minimalist scenery don't chase realism but compose a soothing, hypnotic experience that hasn't aged. The driving, all about slides and anticipation, asks for finesse more than raw reflexes, and the trip through rally's great eras flatters enthusiasts. On Switch a few framerate dips creep in without spoiling the pleasure. It is a niche proposition, contemplative and demanding at once, ideal for anyone wanting a different kind of racer, far from the usual flashiness. Few games make pure focus feel this calming.