2 Player3DRacingBike
GenreDriving
PlatformDesktop browser
DeveloperRHM Interactive
Released2022
PlayersMultiplayer
PriceFree to play
Rating4.5/5 from 44,016 ratings
UpdatedJuly 2026

MX Offroad Master is a free 3D driving game about taking four mountain bikes down steep, hazard-packed hills. You pick a bike, roll toward the edge of a peak, and try to reach the bottom in one piece, all wrapped in a low-poly PS1-era look that suits the rough terrain. The challenge is not flat-out top speed. It is reading the slope, feathering the brakes, and keeping your wheels under you through rocks, ramps, and sudden drops.

It runs straight in your browser with no download, and you can play it solo or hand a second set of controls to a friend for local split racing. Currency earned from clean runs goes into a shop full of new bikes, helmets, costumes, and chains, so the longer you survive, the sharper your rider looks on the way down.

  • Downhill mountain bike driving game with a retro PS1-era 3D look, free in the browser.
  • Four mountain bikes and two modes: timed mountain ride stages and open free ride.
  • Local two-player split racing in both modes, with no online account needed.
  • Earn coins and rubies from runs and stunts to buy bikes, helmets, costumes, and chains.

What is MX Offroad Master?

MX Offroad Master is an arcade driving game built around downhill mountain biking. The core loop is easy to grasp and hard to put down: start high on a mountain, ride down a course dotted with jumps, ramps, and obstacles, and reach the bottom without piling up too many crashes. There is no open world to wander and no career storyline to follow. The game is a series of focused downhill runs where your balance, braking, and timing decide whether you finish or restart.

The arcade physics keep things readable. Speed builds quickly on the steep sections, jumps launch you with a predictable arc, and one bad landing can flip the bike end over end. That tension between going fast to bank currency and going carefully to avoid a restart is what every run comes down to. The retro 3D art style, flat shaded and slightly chunky, is part of the identity and keeps the courses easy to read when the ground is rushing past.

How to play

  1. Pick one of the four mountain bikes, then choose between mountain ride and free ride.
  2. Roll toward the peak and start your descent, letting gravity build your speed.
  3. Tap the brakes before sharp drops, rocks, and ramps to keep the bike level.
  4. Land clean off jumps, because a minor hit sends you back to the last checkpoint.
  5. Watch the three-hit limit, since stacking three hits ends the run and restarts the course from scratch.
  6. Spend your coins and rubies in the shop on better gear before the next mountain.

Controls and braking

The bike handles with a small set of inputs that you lean on constantly. Steering, accelerating, and braking are the backbone, and braking is where runs are won or lost. The scheme is the same on the desktop site and the mobile apps, just mapped to touch buttons on a phone.

ActionDesktopMobile
Steer left and rightA/D or left and right arrowsOn-screen left and right buttons
AccelerateW or up arrowGas pedal button
Brake and reverseS or down arrowBrake button
Stunt in the airSpacebar or stunt keyStunt button

Braking and checkpoints

The single most important skill in the game is the brake. The mountain tracks throw ramps, gaps, and rocks at you faster than you can react at full tilt, and any minor hit counts against you. A small crash resets you to the last checkpoint, which costs you time in mountain ride and breaks your flow in free ride. Stack three hits and the run ends, dropping you back to the start of the whole course. Disciplined braking matters more than raw speed, and most players learn that the hard way on the first few descents.

Speed versus control

Every descent is a trade-off. Go fast and you bank more time and feel the rush of the slope, but you also blow past your reaction window and crash more often. Go slow and you stay safe, but a timid run earns less and feels flat. The riders who clear all 14 mountain ride stages are the ones who brake hard into danger and open the throttle on the clean stretches, not the ones who pin it the whole way down. Finding that rhythm is the real skill the game is teaching you.

Reading the line

Before you worry about speed, learn to read a course. The safest line is usually the one that avoids the sharpest drop-offs and gives you a flat run-up to each ramp. Jumping from a level surface lands far cleaner than launching off a bumpy rock, and clean landings are what keep your hit counter at zero. After a few runs on a mountain you start to memorize where the trouble is, and that memory is what lets you push the pace without crashing out.

Game modes

MX Offroad Master ships with two modes, and both of them support local two-player. They reward different things, so most players bounce between them as they gear up and practice. One is built for progression, the other for freedom.

ModeHow it works
Mountain rideTimed downhill runs across 14 mountain courses; finish a stage to earn currency and unlock the next peak
Free rideOpen arena for practicing stunts and movement at your own pace; earn currency for the tricks you land

Mountain ride

Mountain ride is the structured half of the game. The clock runs while you descend, and reaching the end of a course pays out in-game currency and opens the next mountain. There are 14 levels in this mode, each one its own course with its own layout of hazards, ramps, and drops. Both your time and your crash count matter here. A clean, quick run pays the best, and a three-hit failure boots you all the way back to the start of that course, so the mode pushes you to ride smarter, not just faster.

Free ride

Free ride drops the timer and the level structure. You get an open space to practice jumps, stunts, and bike control with no pressure from a clock or a restart limit. The catch is that you still earn currency here, paid out for the stunts you pull off rather than for finishing a track. It is the right mode for warming up a newly bought bike, learning how it launches and lands, and grinding coins for shop purchases without the stress of crashing out of a timed run.

Customizing your biker

The shop is where your earnings go. Every bike, helmet, costume, and chain is bought with the currency you bank from runs, and dressing up your rider is a real motivator to keep descending. None of it is locked behind a paywall, since the shop runs entirely on coins and rubies you earn by playing.

Item typeWhat it does
BikesNew mountain bikes to ride, each with its own look and feel on the slopes
HelmetsHead protection and a visual style for your rider
CostumesFull outfit changes for your character
ChainsDecorative chain accessories for extra flair on the bike

Currencies: coins and rubies

The shop runs on two currencies. Gold coins are the common one, earned steadily from clean mountain ride runs and from stunts in free ride, and they cover most everyday purchases. Rubies are rarer and reserved for the premium gear, so you tend to save them for a bike or outfit you genuinely want. Playing both modes is the fastest way to keep both balances healthy, since free ride trick payouts stack on top of mountain ride finish rewards. If you are saving for a pricey bike, a few free ride sessions of safe, repeatable stunts will get you there faster than gambling on mountain ride crash-outs.

Local two-player racing

Both modes support a local two-player option, and it is one of the strongest reasons to keep the game open. You and a friend share the same screen and race head to head down the choppy mountain courses, or you both head into the stunt arena and try to out-trick each other. Because it is local, there is no lobby to wait in, no account to make, and no server to depend on. You just load in, pick a mode, and go.

The stunt arena as a versus mode

Free ride turns into something special with two players. Instead of racing to the bottom, you and your friend use the open arena to one-up each other on tricks, calling out landing after landing. It is a more relaxed versus format than the timed mountain runs, and it is a great way to test a new bike against a real opponent without the pressure of the hit counter. For many players this stunt arena showdown is the most fun the game offers, and it costs nothing to set up.

Tips to stay on the bike

  • Brake early on the approach to a ramp, not in the air. You cannot steer once you have launched.
  • Aim for level landings. Nose-down or tail-down hits are the fastest route to a checkpoint reset.
  • Run free ride first to learn a new bike's launch and weight before taking it into mountain ride.
  • Treat the three-hit limit as your real health bar. Two cautious lines beat one reckless sprint that crashes out.
  • Bank coins in free ride with simple, repeatable stunts before you reach for trickier combo moves.
  • In two-player, watch your friend's line. The safe path they take is usually the one to copy.
  • Spend coins on a better bike before you spend them on cosmetics, since a smoother ride earns currency faster.

What makes the PS1 look work

The retro 3D style is not just a nostalgia choice here. The flat-shaded, low-poly courses read instantly at speed, which matters in a game where you are reacting to ramps and rocks every second. There is less visual noise for a hazard to hide behind, so crashes tend to feel fair rather than cheap. The slightly chunky bikes and bouncy physics give the whole thing an arcade personality that a more realistic art style would smooth away. It also keeps the game light enough to run in a browser tab on modest hardware, which fits a quick session between other things. The look and the feel are working toward the same goal, and that is why the aesthetic lands instead of feeling like a gimmick.

Is MX Offroad Master free and unblocked?

MX Offroad Master is free to play in your browser with no download and no account. You can open it on this page right now, and because it loads as a web game, it works on most networks that allow browser games, including school and work machines that can open a normal web page. There is nothing to install and no sign-up step. If you would rather ride on a phone or tablet, native Android and iOS apps are available too, carrying the same bikes, modes, and shop across to mobile so your unlocked gear stays with you.

Get MX Offroad Master on mobile

MX Offroad Master has native Android and iOS apps, so you can keep your downhill runs and unlocked gear going when you step away from the browser.

Frequently asked questions

Is MX Offroad Master free?

Yes. MX Offroad Master is free to play in your browser, with optional Android and iOS apps if you want to ride on mobile.

Is MX Offroad Master unblocked at school?

It is. MX Offroad Master is unblocked on African Safari Games and runs straight in your browser, with no download, so it works on most networks that allow browser games.

Can I play MX Offroad Master with a friend?

Yes. Both mountain ride and free ride support a local two-player mode on a shared screen, with no online lobby or account needed.

How many levels does MX Offroad Master have?

Mountain ride mode has 14 mountain courses that you unlock one after another by finishing each timed descent.

Who made MX Offroad Master and when did it come out?

MX Offroad Master was made by RHM Interactive. It launched on Android in 2018, on iOS in 2021, and the web version reached browsers in January 2022.

Can I play MX Offroad Master on a Chromebook or Mac?

Yes. It is a browser game, so it runs on Chromebooks, Macs, Windows PCs, and any device that can open a modern web page.

MX Offroad Master gameplay video

MX Offroad Master gameplay