Burnout Paradise revolutionised open-world racing. Paradise City to explore freely, spectacular crashes, varied missions, generous online. A timeless genre classic still playable and fun.
Your verdict
Category
Racing4 players7+
Description
Electronic Arts open-world arcade racing set in Paradise City. Published by Electronic Arts, released in Asia in January 2008. Open world with no loading times, spectacular vehicle destruction, online multiplayer mode and pure speed. Asian version.
Burnout Paradise review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
1/5
Story
★★★★★
"Anecdotal"
Dizzying speed, motion blur and spectacular pile-ups filmed in slow motion: everything celebrates the crash as a genuine firework. The brilliance of the settings torn through at full tilt heightens the heady sensation. This visual extravagance, snappy and readable, makes every crash a peak of staging.
Supercharged, the EA Trax selection strings together edgy rock and nervy electro to electrify races built around the crash. Every track spikes the adrenaline and matches the insane speed of the pursuits. This infectious energy, cut for chaos, is an integral part of the sensation of pure release.
Gameplay
"Masterful"
Tearing through an open city at full throttle, triggering races at any street corner and setting off spectacular pile-ups underpins a gloriously satisfying arcade drive. The sense of speed and the boost management remain exemplary. A pioneer of open-world racing, it retains a fire and a clarity that still win players over today.
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
An open city entirely devoted to speed, where you chain races, stunts and takedowns with no loading whatsoever: the freedom to bomb anywhere you like delivers a constant high. Causing a spectacular pile-up or beating a record stays an instant pleasure. Snappy, generous and fiercely addictive, an arcade racer that turns the whole city into a playground.
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Racing into oncoming traffic to swell your boost gauge and brush past disaster turns every drive into a surge of adrenaline that begs for the next run. Beating times, triggering crashes and unlocking everything in an open city keep pulling you back. The challenges repeat a little, but pure speed and the sensation of risk keep an immediate grip.
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Massive"
Paradise City unfolds without menus or loading screens, and that is precisely where the hours vanish: tracking down every hidden jump, every billboard to smash and every shortcut turns the city into one vast playground. Seventy-five cars to unlock and dozens of events scattered across the junctions feed replayability. Its exhilarating open world explains the lasting appeal.
The Asian run of Burnout Paradise, circulated far more narrowly than the common Western editions of Criterion's open-world racer. This release appeals to collectors attentive to the rare local versions of an otherwise widespread hit. Its desirability lies mainly in this geographic scarcity.
Better with friends
Super-charged arcade driving where the open city becomes a permanent playground, ripe for improvised challenges and spectacular crashes. The competition mixes with playful exploration: beating a friend's time on a jump or triggering the perfect pile-up brings instant joy. The online side leans on uncertain servers, but the thrill of speed and wreckage stays intact in multiplayer.
Is Burnout Paradise still worth playing in 2026?
Burnout Paradise rethought the arcade racer by opening it into a free world, and that freedom stays exhilarating today. Tearing through Paradise City, triggering events and shortcuts at each junction, keeps a flow few heirs have matched. The spectacular crashes and the sense of speed retain all their flair. The lack of an instant restart after a failure occasionally grates, and the original version is leaner than its Ultimate reissue. What remains is a genre classic, still playable and jubilant, ideal for short bursts or marathons.