Bizarre Creations cook up an explosive marriage of arcade racing and Mario Kart style weapons in neon land. Driving feel is gorgeous, the urban zones pulse, and local multiplayer is still a treasure for friendly evenings.
Your verdict
Category
Racing4 players12+
Split screen
Description
Arcade racing by Bizarre Creations and Activision, May 2010. Famous F1, rally and motorcycle pilots race on global circuits with a celebrity progression system rather than rankings. Nitro earned by approaching rivals and executing risky manœuvres, colorful light flash visual effects and online multiplayer. Arcade racing game with unique visual style.
Blur Racerz review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
4/5
Music
★★★★★
"Excellent"
1/5
Story
★★★★★
"Anecdotal"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
Mixing arcade racing and Mario Kart-style weapons on realistic tracks makes for an explosive, fiercely snappy cocktail. Dropping a power-up to overtake at the last second or fend off an attack delivers an instant thrill, especially in multiplayer. Colourful, fast and built for confrontation, a racer that blows up the genre's conventions with contagious fun.
Blur, a Bizarre Creations arcade racer that grafts weapons and power-ups onto real-car driving, a bold fusion left without a sequel after the studio's closure. Delisted from online stores, its desirability rests on this status as an orphaned gem of a vanished studio and a niche demand rather than a mass scarcity, the Japanese run being harder to find. An interesting piece for a racing set.
Better with friends
An arcade racer that grafts arena-style weapons onto real cars, turning each grand prix into a rolling brawl of offensive pickups. The competition swings between clean driving and timely dirty tricks, where the leader is never safe from a vengeful strike. The original online play is no longer guaranteed, but local split-screen keeps all its chaotic, convivial energy.
Is Blur Racerz still worth playing in 2026?
Released in 2010 on Xbox 360, Bizarre Creations' Blur weds the grounded handling of real production cars with an offensive power up system inherited from kart racers, a bold bet that works surprisingly well. Firing a salvo at full speed on a neon lit night circuit delivers an immediate, tense thrill. The polished multiplayer was its great strength before the servers closed. The electrifying art direction has kept its stamp. For fans of nervy arcade racing and those nostalgic for the Project Gotham studio, this singular title still amply deserves the wheel today.