A faithful port of the arcade classic with that inimitable drifty feel. Punchy races, a legendary soundtrack and every corner begging for another credit. Pure Sega bliss.
Your verdict
Category
Racing4 players3+
Split screen
Description
Stock cars race on Daytona's legendary oval circuits in this enriched 2001 Dreamcast version. Published by Sega, released in Europe in November 2001. Stock car racing on Daytona circuits with additional content, new cars and tracks, online mode. European version.
Daytona USA 2001 review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
1/5
Story
★★★★★
"Anecdotal"
Impossible to forget the thunderous "Let's Go Away" and the "Daytonaaa" cry of Takenobu Mitsuyoshi, kitsch and jubilant anthems of the arcade. These vitamin-charged rock refrains stick to the frenzy of the corners and spike every overtake. This unabashed sonic madness remains one of the racing game's greatest guilty pleasures.
Gameplay
"Masterful"
It all comes down to the slide: starting a drift, feathering the throttle and feeling the car pivot to the millimetre delivers driving of surprising finesse. Behind its good-natured cabinet looks hides a genuine mastery curve that rewards practice. The 2001 presentation has aged, but that handling feel remains a benchmark of arcade racing.
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
Three tracks, drifts to tame and a straightaway where you holler into the bends: old-school racing finds its purest shape here. The thrill comes from wheel-to-wheel battles and a timer crumbling away. Raw sensations, instant handling: this arcade monument is still a treat with a pad in hand.
Addictiveness
"Captivating"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Average"
Technical info
💾0,49 GB📅29/11/2001
Published by Sega
Daytona USA 2001 (Dreamcast) price, value & rarity
Daytona USA 2001 PAL is the European version of the game's full remake, with an engine rebuilt for the Dreamcast. Collector value comes from the rarity of the PAL Sega print and from this remake offering tracks absent from the original arcade, a configuration never reproduced in modern Live Arcade releases.
Better with friends
Brimming with arcade adrenaline, this asphalt classic is best savored wheel to wheel in split-screen, fighting for the inside line through the final corner. The fun lies in the forgiving drift and last-ditch overtakes far more than in simulation. Easy to fire up for a quick race among friends, it stacks up "just one more" runs and guaranteed trash talk.
Is Daytona USA 2001 still worth playing in 2026?
On Dreamcast, Daytona USA gains in visual sharpness while preserving the arcade spirit that built its legend. Generous handling, tense drifts and the buoyant atmosphere all still land, particularly in local multiplayer. A few technical compromises remain visible next to the Saturn release or more recent revisits, yet the joy of stomping the brake into the final corner is intact. A detour well worth taking for anyone curious about why Sega once ruled the arcade scene.