Just hours before launch, Wreckreation found itself center stage thanks to a 40-minute gameplay leak that tore across YouTube. Captured from the PS5 version, the unfiltered footage delivered a messy but thrilling look at what could be the spiritual successor fans of Burnout have been waiting for.
Wreckreation leak features arcade-style mayhem and track-building

Uploaded by YouTuber Flotutu, the footage puts Wreckreation’s arcade roots front and center. Expect looping tracks, huge air jumps, destruction-heavy collisions, and a generous nod to Trackmania-style build-your-own chaos. It’s clear the DNA of classic Burnout and Need for Speed lives on here.
The visuals channel that same kinetic energy, cars flying off ramps, barrel rolls through signposts, debris raining down on the road. And all of it happens at breakneck speeds.
Technical bugs revealed in early PS5 build
Not everything in the leak is a reason to cheer. Players were quick to call out glitches and performance dips, especially during intense collisions. One issue showed vehicles freezing awkwardly after mission completion. Others noticed inconsistent crash models and frame drops, particularly concerning a system like the PS5.
Still, most viewers chalked these quirks up to an early build, not reflective of the final version. A launch day patch is expected to polish much of what’s been shown.
A nostalgia-fueled ride from Burnout veterans
Wreckreation is being developed by Three Fields Entertainment, a studio founded by former Criterion devs, the same minds behind Burnout. It’s also published by THQ Nordic, who seem keen on giving the team room to get wild.
For longtime arcade racing fans, this one hits different. No strict lap rules, no fuel gauges, just pedal-to-the-metal mayhem. And that’s exactly what many have missed since Burnout Paradise hit the streets back in 2008.
Here’s what the leak confirmed:
- Burnout-style crashes and takedowns
- Massive stunts and jump-friendly track design
- Live track-building tools during gameplay
- Open-world racing with mission-based structure
- Vehicle customization and creative freedom
Mixed reactions, but that’s kind of the point
While some have called the handling floaty and the contact physics “gnat-like,” others see it as the charm. Not everyone wants a simulation; some just want to blast through a guardrail at 180 MPH and explode into a fireball.
And that’s where Wreckreation seems to land: deliberately unrefined, gloriously chaotic, and hardwired for arcade nostalgia.
Release day is here, glitches and all
The full version of Wreckreation launches today, October 28, 2025, on PlayStation 5, Xbox Series S|X, and PC. Whether it sticks the landing or flies off the edge in a blaze of glory, well, that’s part of the fun.

