Review angle
Racing Master makes its strongest impression before the first corner. The cars look sharp, the lighting sells the showroom fantasy, and the game clearly wants to feel closer to a serious racing experience than a loose arcade sprint.
That ambition gives it a strong identity on mobile. The question is whether the game can keep races interesting once the visual surprise settles.
Driving feel
The handling model leans into weight and control. Drifts, acceleration, and corner exits take some adjustment, but the game provides enough assists and sensitivity options to help players find a comfortable setup.
That flexibility is important because racing games are highly personal on touch screens. A layout that feels natural for one player can feel awkward for another.
Content and presentation
Licensed vehicles and detailed garage options give the collection side real appeal. Tuning, paint, body details, and performance upgrades make the cars feel like more than simple stat cards.
The weaker piece is variety. Straightforward races are enjoyable, but more challenge types and sharper event goals would help the campaign breathe between standard track runs.
ArcadeLens verdict
Racing Master is one of the more convincing realistic racing experiences on mobile because it respects handling, sound, and vehicle presentation.
It still needs broader race structure to feel essential long term, but players who care about car feel and visual polish will find a lot to appreciate.