How to play
Gamepad or keyboard. Standard race controls plus a jump-prep button for loops. Suspension responds to landings and take-offs. Freestyle mode rewards stunt combos rather than finish position.
Game features
- Eight arenas with gimmick sections
- Eight trucks with distinct suspension profiles
- Freestyle scoring mode for stunts
- Visible suspension travel with terrain response
- Touch, keyboard, and gamepad input
- Local high-score table per arena
Editor review
Monster Loop is a monster truck arena racer with loop-de-loop track sections and giant-tire physics. Eight trucks. Eight arenas. The format leans toward spectacle rather than precision, and within the spectacle lane it executes well.
What works is the suspension physics. Monster trucks have visible suspension travel that responds to terrain. Landings compress the suspension. Take-offs extend it. Cornering rolls the body. The suspension is exaggerated for spectacle but consistent enough to be readable. This is what makes the loops work, since you need to know when the truck will leave the ground.
Eight arenas with distinct gimmick sections. Some have loop-de-loops or car-crusher zones, with water hazards in a couple of others. The variety prevents arena-to-arena fatigue.
Tested with gamepad and keyboard. Both work because the format does not demand precision. Touch is supported but loses precision in the loops where positional accuracy matters.
Where the design works is the freestyle scoring mode. Beyond the standard race mode, there is a freestyle mode where you earn points for stunts and jumps plus crusher-hit combos. This adds a second axis to the gameplay beyond just finishing position.
Where I would push back is the visual presentation, which is competent but feels dated. Monster truck culture in 2026 has moved on from the chrome-and-flames aesthetic, and the visual design here is firmly stuck in 2010. A more modern visual direction would lift the experience.
Three-and-a-half stars. Solid monster truck arena game with strong suspension physics and dated visuals. Worth playing for the spectacle; the dated look is a minor flaw.
Spent eight years reviewing games for Spanish-language sites before his main publisher folded in 2024. Switched to English-language coverage and never looked back. Tests games on a Toshiba laptop he refuses to retire.
Frequently asked questions about Monster Loop
How do I play Monster Loop?
Gamepad or keyboard. Standard race controls plus a jump-prep button for loops. Suspension responds to landings and take-offs. Freestyle mode rewards stunt combos rather than finish position.
Is Monster Loop free to play in my browser?
Yes. Monster Loop runs free in any modern browser. No installation, no signup, no payment required. Click the play button to load the game.
Does Monster Loop work on mobile devices?
Monster Loop runs in mobile browsers on iOS and Android with touch controls. Most racing games on AJ Arcade support both desktop and mobile, though precision-heavy titles tend to play better on desktop with a keyboard or gamepad.
Who reviewed Monster Loop on AJ Arcade?
Marcus Reyes reviewed Monster Loop. Their full editor review appears above and their other coverage is available on their author profile.
Where can I find more games like Monster Loop?
More racing titles are available on the Racing category page. Every game on AJ Arcade has been played and reviewed by one of our three reviewers before publication.