Brick Rigs Reviews
Build your own vehicles or download one of the more than 200,000 creations already uploaded to the Workshop and experience the dynamic driving and destruction physics of Brick Rigs!
App ID | 552100 |
App Type | GAME |
Developers | Fluppisoft |
Publishers | Fluppisoft |
Categories | Single-player, Multi-player, PvP, Online PvP, Partial Controller Support, Steam Trading Cards, Steam Workshop |
Genres | Simulation |
Release Date | 14 Jul, 2023 |
Platforms | Windows |
Supported Languages | English, German |

50 122 Total Reviews
47 391 Positive Reviews
2 731 Negative Reviews
Very Positive Score
Brick Rigs has garnered a total of 50 122 reviews, with 47 391 positive reviews and 2 731 negative reviews, resulting in a ‘Very Positive’ overall score.
Reviews Chart
Chart above illustrates the trend of feedback for Brick Rigs over time, showcasing the dynamic changes in player opinions as new updates and features have been introduced. This visual representation helps to understand the game's reception and how it has evolved.
Recent Steam Reviews
This section displays the 10 most recent Steam reviews for the game, showcasing a mix of player experiences and sentiments. Each review summary includes the total playtime along with the number of thumbs-up and thumbs-down reactions, clearly indicating the community's feedback
Playtime:
28 minutes
Not controller friendly. Ran great on ally x but controls weren't up to par. The game would probably be great with keyboard and mouse. I just don't prefer that method.
👍 : 0 |
😃 : 0
Negative
Playtime:
980 minutes
Very fun to play in public servers and alone, worth every penny
👍 : 0 |
😃 : 0
Positive
Playtime:
319 minutes
this game is mostly fun with friends but a good experience to just play alone
👍 : 0 |
😃 : 0
Positive
Playtime:
84436 minutes
A very good game that promotes creativity and passion. Very good building system that is easy to learn but hard to master.
Online servers are a blast, some of my most unforgettable online memories happened in RP and war servers in this game.
but most of the player base is 13 and under. So that sucks. All and all worth my money.
👍 : 3 |
😃 : 0
Positive
Playtime:
2417 minutes
Honestly the worst community ever in my opinion, i can't find a server where i don't get cussed at for asking a question, or get yelled at for spawning a vehicle that matches with the genre. I have been in about 4 naval rp servers, and every single one i was yelled at for using a fucking SH-60 because their little pea brains can't comprehend that a vehicle can have different variants.
Honestly im writing this out of frustration. The game is amazing with friends, not randoms. Get it if you plan to play with friends.
👍 : 21 |
😃 : 8
Negative
Playtime:
1405 minutes
Brick Rigs is a unique and endlessly creative sandbox simulation game that invites players into a dynamic world of building, destruction, and physics experimentation. Developed by Lukas Rustemeyer and initially released in Early Access in 2016, the game has continued to evolve with the support of a dedicated community. Built in Unreal Engine, Brick Rigs allows players to construct vehicles—ranging from simple cars and planes to complex tanks, helicopters, trains, and even fully functional mechanical contraptions—out of LEGO-style bricks, and then test them in a physics-rich environment where chaos and hilarity often ensue. What makes Brick Rigs stand out is not just the creative freedom it offers, but the remarkably realistic vehicle handling and destruction physics, which add a tangible sense of weight and authenticity to every creation.
At its core, Brick Rigs is about experimentation. The intuitive building system allows players to snap together bricks in three dimensions, offering an impressive range of parts including engines, suspensions, rotors, wheels, hinges, and more. This freedom enables the creation of everything from realistic replicas of real-world vehicles to bizarre, imaginative constructs limited only by the player's ingenuity. Vehicles are not just static models—they function with simulated engines, physics-based steering, and aerodynamic properties. The attention to detail in how these vehicles handle on different surfaces, react to collisions, and deform upon impact is a key part of the game’s appeal. Watching your custom-built jet nosedive into a building and explode into dozens of bouncing, crumpling pieces is a strangely satisfying spectacle.
The game offers several maps, including cityscapes, deserts, racetracks, airports, and rail yards, each serving as a sandbox for vehicular stunts, races, and battles. Though the maps themselves are relatively simple in terms of graphical fidelity, their layout provides a flexible space to showcase and test vehicles in various scenarios. One of the most engaging aspects of Brick Rigs is its multiplayer mode, where players can spawn their creations and interact in shared servers. Whether teaming up for coordinated flight displays or crashing tanks into trains in organized chaos, multiplayer adds a social, often comedic, layer to the physics-driven gameplay. While it can sometimes be chaotic and unmoderated, especially on public servers, the ability to host private games ensures more controlled or collaborative sessions.
Community integration is another strength of Brick Rigs. The Steam Workshop is deeply embedded into the experience, offering tens of thousands of user-generated vehicles ready to download with a single click. This accessibility creates an endlessly refreshing pool of content, and the creativity on display—from functional jet airliners to transforming mechs—is astounding. Even players who aren't skilled builders can enjoy the game by exploring and modifying these community creations. The developer has fostered a vibrant ecosystem by keeping the game highly moddable and regularly updated, even if major updates can be spaced far apart due to the solo development model.
Visually, Brick Rigs walks a fine line between simplicity and functionality. The LEGO-style aesthetic is clean and instantly recognizable, and while it may not impress those looking for cutting-edge graphics, the visual style serves the gameplay well by keeping performance high and readability clear. What really shines is the destruction system—parts break off, twist, and deform in believable ways, giving crashes a visceral sense of impact. The audio design complements this, with satisfying engine noises, tire screeches, and explosive booms that give feedback to every high-speed chase or mid-air collision.
Performance-wise, Brick Rigs is generally stable and runs well on mid-range PCs, though performance can dip when rendering massive vehicles or hosting large multiplayer sessions. Optimization has improved over time, but the game’s physics-heavy nature means framerate drops are still possible when stress-testing the engine with overly complex creations. Controls are relatively intuitive, especially for driving and flying vehicles, though the building interface can take some time to master, especially for newer players. Still, once you learn how the components work and how to balance your designs, the process becomes both creative and rewarding.
In terms of progression, Brick Rigs doesn’t have a traditional campaign or structured gameplay loop. It's purely sandbox—there are no objectives, missions, or story elements. For some, this lack of structure might feel like a missing component, but for others, it's what makes the game so liberating. Your goals are self-imposed: build a better monster truck, recreate a famous aircraft, test the limits of a crash barrier, or simply create chaos with friends.
In summary, Brick Rigs is a fantastic physics sandbox for anyone who loves building, breaking, and experimenting with vehicles. It offers an outstanding level of creative freedom, realistic and satisfying destruction physics, and a thriving community that keeps the game feeling fresh. While it may lack structured content and occasionally suffer from performance issues, its core loop of creation and experimentation is both entertaining and highly replayable. Whether you’re a budding engineer, a fan of vehicular mayhem, or just someone looking for a fun, sandbox-style game to enjoy solo or with friends, Brick Rigs delivers a uniquely satisfying and endlessly customizable experience.
Rating: 9/10
👍 : 6 |
😃 : 0
Positive
Playtime:
62740 minutes
Playerbase is retarded
Server hosting is retarded
Role-play servers are retarded
Hyper-realistic vehicles are retarded
The amount of Kids on this game, is retarded.
8/10 game, 1/10 playerbase, 2/10 support for Low-end machines
If you have a brain, and a supercomputer. Brick rigs is fun
👍 : 11 |
😃 : 8
Positive
Playtime:
1097 minutes
This game is absolutely beautiful and I suggest it to anyone who likes a chaotic sandbox game!
👍 : 9 |
😃 : 0
Positive
Playtime:
2316 minutes
This game is so fun when i joined a random multiplayer game some dude told me to follow him and flew a giant penis into a tower 10/10
👍 : 26 |
😃 : 20
Positive
Playtime:
1224 minutes
Perfect game to play alone, or with friends!(hope i spelled that right) Its basically beam n g but cheaper and with lego.
Edit: I forgot to say that I broke my foot and my almost 13 hours of gameplay have occurred over the past 3 days, seriously.
👍 : 13 |
😃 : 8
Positive