Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Get unlimited access to 10,000+ magazines, newspapers and Premium stories for just

$149.99
 
$74.99/Year

Try GOLD - Free

Wheel World

Edge UK

|

October 2025

For many of us, the humble bicycle will have represented our first taste of freedom. An opportunity to strike out on our own, unsupervised and untethered from home, across fields, into town, or (depending on where you grew up) around an industrial estate. While Wheel World combines the fantastical trappings of haunted bikes with the lingo and Lycra of modern cycling enthusiasts, more than anything else it plays as a tribute to that youthful feeling: here's a bike, here's some open space — go nuts.

The machine itself is simple enough to control, with acceleration on the right trigger — a consistent press, no need to manually pump the pedals — and braking on the left. There's a bunny hop controlled by pulling back on the stick, plus a boost fuelled by tricks and near misses, but the majority of your time will be spent with the core mechanic: turning the handlebars with the stick and balancing brakes and pedal to match the turn ahead.

For all the simplicity of this interaction, care has been taken over its feel. There's the right sense of weight to the bike, hefty on the corners, light as air as momentum carries you downhill. As a steed, a bicycle is like a horse spliced with a giraffe, elegant at top speed on a downhill straight, ungainly if you slow down — and Wheel World captures that, for good and ill. Despite the spectral energy powering it (remember, this bike is haunted), the speed boost is a convincing expression of how it feels to be in the saddle with the wind whistling in your ears and the pedals unable to keep up. Equally, getting back up to speed after a crash feels clumsy — just as it should. But this can become frustrating when said crash was a result of your bike clipping on something it shouldn't have or the camera failing to keep up, which are both common occurrences.

MORE STORIES FROM Edge UK

Edge UK

Edge UK

Post Script

Battlefield 6's singleplayer offering wouldn't have matched Call Of Duty in 2011

time to read

2 mins

Christmas 2025

Edge UK

Edge UK

Post Script

The art of not fighting

time to read

3 mins

Christmas 2025

Edge UK

Edge UK

Absolum

In its branching structure and buffet of combat techniques, it can stand toe to toe with any champion

time to read

4 mins

Christmas 2025

Edge UK

Edge UK

Ball X Pit

Fire and petrol. Coke and Mentos. Beans and toast. Of all the potent combinations to emerge throughout recorded history, Kenny Sun's Ball X Pit offers one of the most devious concoctions yet: Vampire Survivors and Breakout.

time to read

2 mins

Christmas 2025

Edge UK

Edge UK

COLLECTED WORKS JERK GUSTAFSSON

From making Quake maps to reviving Wolfenstein, with a master of firstperson videogame design

time to read

14 mins

Christmas 2025

Edge UK

Edge UK

Dreams Of Another

The man in pyjamas may be holding an automatic rifle, but as we keep the trigger squeezed, rattling out an infinite supply of bullets, Dreams Of Another feels as therapeutic as PowerWash Simulator.

time to read

2 mins

Christmas 2025

Edge UK

Edge UK

Battlefield 6

There's always a way to throw yourself back into the fray or to grab a breather and assess your options

time to read

6 mins

Christmas 2025

Edge UK

Ninja Gaiden 4

Ninja Gaiden 4 revels in the transgression of refusing to stop where you'd normally expect

time to read

4 mins

Christmas 2025

Edge UK

Edge UK

BACK TO LIFE

Herobeat Studios hopes for redemption in the face of environmental collapse

time to read

1 min

Christmas 2025

Edge UK

Edge UK

RETRY.EXE

Inside the long and gruelling journey of Lunar Software's sinister sci-fi horror

time to read

14 mins

Christmas 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size