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Midnight Club 3 DUB Edition Remix (PS2)

Video Games · Rockstar Games · Affiliate

Midnight Club 3 DUB Edition Remix is the definitive version of Rockstar's open-world street racer — more cars, more cities, more customization, and a soundtrack that still holds up.

Travis
Travis Owner & Reviewer
4.5/5
$18.99 Price at time of review
Updated Apr 2026

TL;DR Summary

4.5/5 Excellent

Pros

  • Remix edition includes expanded vehicle roster and additional customization over the original DUB release
  • Three distinct open-world cities with layouts that reward genuine memorization
  • Deep customization system — wheels, body kits, paint, hydraulics — that still impresses for the era
  • Soundtrack integrates into the city atmosphere rather than functioning as a simple background playlist
  • Varied vehicle classes with handling differences meaningful enough to matter

Cons

  • Load times are slow by any modern standard — a PS2-era reality, not an exception
  • Camera can become adversarial during tight urban race sections
  • Physical disc format means condition varies; inspect used copies carefully before buying

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Extended Observations

Midnight Club 3 DUB Edition Remix is the definitive version of Rockstar's open-world street racer — more cars, more cities, more customization, and a soundtrack that still holds up.

By 2006, the street racing genre was crowded. Need for Speed was chasing cinematic gloss, Burnout was leaning into spectacle, and most competitors had settled into familiar loops. Midnight Club 3 DUB Edition Remix arrived on PS2 as something more considered — an open-world racer that rewarded patience and punished recklessness, built around a car culture that felt genuinely researched rather than licensed for marketing purposes.

The Remix edition adds content over the original DUB Edition release: more vehicles, additional customization options, and an expanded soundtrack. For anyone coming to this cold, it's the version to own. The three cities — San Diego, Atlanta, and Tokyo — each have distinct road layouts and traffic patterns, and learning them is part of the game. There's no minimap hand-holding here. You memorize routes or you lose.

Customization is where the game earns its DUB branding honestly. Wheel fitment, body kits, paint, hydraulics, interior details — the depth sits well above what most contemporaries offered. The vehicle roster spans muscle cars, imports, SUVs, and motorcycles, and each handles differently enough that swapping between them requires real adjustment. The physics aren't simulation-grade, but they're consistent and readable, which matters more in practice.

The soundtrack deserves mention. Hip-hop, reggaeton, and electronic tracks are woven into the city ambiance rather than just queued in a playlist. It contributes to the sense that you're actually in these places, not just racing through rendered backdrops. Twenty years on, certain tracks still trigger the muscle memory of a tight Tokyo corner.

This is a PS2 disc in 2024, so context matters. Used copies circulate at reasonable prices, and the game runs fine on original hardware or through a PS3 with backward compatibility. The load times are period-appropriate — meaning slow — and the camera can fight you on tight urban sections. Neither is a dealbreaker, but both are worth knowing going in. For the PS2-era racing fan, or anyone building out a serious retro library, Midnight Club 3 DUB Edition Remix holds its ground without apology.

Our Verdict

Midnight Club 3 DUB Edition Remix is the definitive version of Rockstar's open-world street racer — more cars, more cities, more customization, and a soundtrack that still holds up.

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