Speed Unbound Palace Edition Wiki - Complete Guide
Quick Facts
Developer: Criterion Games
Publisher: Electronic Arts (EA)
Release Date: December 2, 2022
Platforms: PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, PC (EA App, Steam, Epic Games Store)
Genre: Open-World Arcade Racing
Game Engine: Frostbite
Palace Edition Specifics: Includes the base game, 48-hour early access, the Palace Edition Content Bundle (consisting of the Porsche 911 Carrera RSR 2.8, a custom Palace Skateboards livery, an exclusive outfit set, and four sets of Palace-branded driving effects), plus the Year 1 Volume 1 and Volume 2 packs that grant access to post-launch DLC cars and content.

What Makes It Special
Need for Speed Unbound represents a bold, artistic reinvention of the long-running racing franchise. After years of drifting between different tones—from the gritty realism of 2015’s Need for Speed to the legal-oriented Payback—Criterion Games returned to the helm and delivered something completely unexpected. The game is most immediately defined by its striking visual identity, but its true specialness lies in how it merges high-octane underground street racing culture with a deeply expressive, almost punk-rock aesthetic.
The "Brought Alive" Visual Style
The undeniable centerpiece of Unbound is its ground-breaking art direction. The game takes place in a realistic, photorealistic city, but the cars, the nitrous flames, and the speed effects are rendered in a stylized, hand-drawn, 2D-animated aesthetic that looks like graffiti tags, comic books, and pop art leaping off the screen. When you hit a massive jump or activate your nitrous, the car doesn't just glow—it explodes into a flurry of animated lines, scribbles, and oversized typography that emphasizes the sheer adrenaline of the moment. This "brought alive" effect makes the game feel like a moving canvas, completely separating it from the visual homogeneity of other racing simulators and arcade racers on the market.
The Palace Skateboards Collaboration
The Palace Edition elevates this artistic vision by directly tying the game into the real-world world of London-based streetwear brand Palace Skateboards. Known for their VHS-style aesthetic, irreverent humor, and iconic "Tri-Ferg" logo, Palace’s integration isn't just a superficial logo slap. The brand’s DNA is woven into the visual effects, the clothing options, and the overarching vibe of the game. If you opt for the Palace Edition, your introduction to Lakeshore City is steeped in this specific subculture, bridging the gap between skate culture, streetwear enthusiasts, and gearhead street racers in a way no other racing game has attempted.
A Return to the Underground
Beyond the visuals, Unbound is special because it remembers what made the classic Need for Speed games of the early 2000s so beloved. It abandons the cinematic, fast-and-furious heist tropes of recent entries and brings the focus back to the grassroots level: building a car in a garage, risking it all on a race for pink slips, and outrunning the cops in a heavily modified tuner. It treats street racing not as a global terrorist plot, but as a vibrant, dangerous, and deeply personal subculture.

How to Play
At its core, Need for Speed Unbound is an arcade racer, meaning it prioritizes fun, accessibility, and spectacular moments over strict physical simulation. However, beneath the flashy exterior is a surprisingly deep racing sandbox with several interconnected systems.
Driving Mechanics
The driving model in Unbound strikes a delicate balance between gripping tarmac and sliding chaos. Cars have a tangible sense of weight and momentum, but they are highly forgiving. You are encouraged to drift—not just for style, but to fill your Nitrous Bar. Initiating a drift by braking while turning into a corner allows you to maintain speed through tight bends. The longer you hold a drift without hitting a wall, the more nitrous you build. There are multiple tiers of nitrous, with longer drifts rewarding you with higher-tier, longer-lasting boosts that are essential for winning later races.
The Heat System
Progression in Unbound is tied to risk versus reward. As you participate in races during a single in-game "day," you accumulate Heat (represented by stars, from 1 to 5). Higher heat levels mean the police in Lakeshore City become increasingly aggressive, deploying standard cruisers, spike strips, helicopters, and heavy SUVs to take you down.
However, you must reach at least Heat Level 3 to qualify for the weekly "Qualifiers" and ultimately the "Grand"—high-stakes, multi-stage racing events where you can win massive cash payouts and unique car parts. If you get busted by the cops before reaching a "Safe House" to bank your money, you lose your unbanked cash and face heavy repair costs. This creates a thrilling gameplay loop where you must push your luck to get ahead.
Takeover Events
Scattered throughout the open world are "Takeover" spots—designated areas like drift zones, speed traps, and jump ramps. Completing these activities earns you "Rep" and adds a multiplier to your weekly earnings. Maintaining control of these Takeovers by beating your own (or your friends') scores is crucial for maximizing your income and upgrading your cars.

World & Lore
Need for Speed Unbound takes place in Lakeshore City, a fictional, sprawling metropolis heavily inspired by the real-world geography and culture of Chicago. The city is a character in itself, divided into several distinct districts that cater to different racing disciplines.
Key Locations in Lakeshore City
- Edgewood: A suburban, tree-lined area featuring winding roads and elevation changes. It serves as a great testing ground for handling and is where the player's initial garage is located.
- Goldwell: An industrial waterfront district filled with heavy shipping containers, cranes, and wide sweeping corners. This area is frequently used for Sprint races and features excellent hiding spots from police.
- Keystone: The dense, neon-lit downtown core of Lakeshore. It is characterized by tight intersections, heavy traffic, and massive skyscrapers that create a stunning visual backdrop for the game's street art effects.
- Riviera: A coastal area featuring a massive dam and long, high-speed straights where players can truly test their top speed and higher-tier nitrous management.
The Story Context
The narrative of Unbound is grounded and personal. You play as a silent protagonist who, alongside their closest friend and mechanic Yaz, has spent years building a dream car from the ground up. On the eve of entering the city's biggest underground racing event, the "Grand," you are betrayed by a former associate who steals your car and uses it to secure a spot in the tournament. Left with nothing, you must start from scratch, taking out loans, entering smaller races, building a new fleet of cars, and climbing the ranks of Lakeshore’s underground scene to win back your stolen vehicle and claim the championship. Along the way, you interact with a colorful cast of characters, including mechanics, fashion designers, and rival racers, all of whom embody the DIY spirit of the city.

Getting Started Guide
Starting out in Lakeshore City can be overwhelming. The streets are fast, the cops are ruthless, and your starter bank account is woefully inadequate for the cars you want. Here is a step-by-step guide to surviving your first few days and building a racing empire.
Step 1: Choose Your Starter Car Wisely
At the beginning of the game, you are given a choice between a few starter cars based on different performance classes (e.g., a balanced sports car, a lightweight drifter, or a muscle car). For absolute beginners, the balanced car is highly recommended. It offers a forgiving learning curve and performs adequately in both sprint and drift events, allowing you to learn the game's mechanics without fighting the car's inherent quirks. Do not worry about aesthetics right now; focus purely on drivability.
Step 2: Respect the Rhythm of the Week
Do not just jump from race to race mindlessly. Understand the weekly rhythm. Monday through Thursday is for building Heat and money. You should be doing standard races, completing Takeovers, and intentionally avoiding the police until you reach Heat Level 3. Once you hit Heat 3, immediately find a Safe House to bank your cash and trigger the Friday Qualifier. If you lose the Qualifier, you have Saturday to grind more cash and try again. If you win, you advance to the Sunday Grand. Winning the Grand resets your Heat to zero, allowing you to start the cycle again with a massive payout.
Step 3: Master the "Drift-to-Nitrous" Economy
Your success hinges on nitrous management. Do not waste low-level nitrous on straightaways. Instead, practice initiating long, sweeping drifts around corners to build up to "Burst" or "Shockwave" level nitrous. Save these high-tier boosts for massive straights, steep uphill sections, or crucial overtaking moments. A well-timed Shockwave boost is often the difference between first and second place.
Step 4: Invest in the Right Upgrades Early
When you visit the garage, you will be bombarded with part options. Focus your early cash on three specific areas: Tires (for better grip off the line), Transmission (to achieve a higher top speed before the race ends), and Drift Handling (to make building nitrous easier and safer). Do not overspend on visual body kits until your car is mechanically competitive in the current race class.
Step 5: Survive the Police
When you inevitably attract the cops, do not panic. Avoid driving in straight lines where spike strips can easily be deployed. Instead, use the environment. Drive through narrow alleys, slide under overpasses, and utilize the game's "hide" mechanic by breaking the line of sight with the police helicopters and parking in dark alleys or underground garages. Learning the map's escape routes early will save you thousands in repair bills.
Step 6: Utilize the Palace Edition Goodies
If you are playing the Palace Edition, remember to check your garage for the included Porsche 911 Carrera RSR 2.8. This is a high-tier classic car that performs exceptionally well in early-to-mid game events. Equipping the Palace livery and driving effects not only makes your car look incredible, but it also provides a great psychological boost as you weave through traffic. Equip the Palace outfit to ensure you are maximizing the streetwear aesthetic the game was built around.
Common Questions
What exactly do I get in the Palace Edition compared to the Standard Edition?
The Palace Edition is geared toward players who want immediate aesthetic flair and all future content. You receive 48 hours of early access to the game, four unique sets of animated Palace driving effects (like smoke trails and nitrous flames), a Palace-branded character outfit, a special Palace livery for the included Porsche 911 Carrera RSR 2.8, and the Year 1 Pass. The Year 1 Pass includes seven additional cars released in post-launch "Volumes," such as the Mercedes-AMG GT 63 S and the BMW M3 Competition.
Is the game always played in first-person?
No, while Need for Speed Unbound features a highly immersive first-person cockpit camera that is fantastic for VR-adjacent immersion, you are entirely free to switch to a third-person chase camera at any time in the settings. In fact, many players prefer the third-person view specifically because it allows them to fully appreciate the game's unique 2D-animated visual effects erupting around their car during boosts and near-misses.
Can you turn off the graffiti and visual effects?
Yes. If the stylized, animated effects are not to your taste, Criterion Games has included a "Visual Effects" slider in the settings menu. You can turn the "Brought Alive" effects down to zero, which removes the animated smoke, graffiti tags, and 2D lines, leaving you with a very clean, traditional, photorealistic racing game. However, playing without them significantly alters the intended personality of the game.
Does the Palace Edition content transfer to the EA App if I buy it on Steam?
Yes, despite the game requiring an EA account to play regardless of where it is purchased, DLC and edition-specific content are tied to the platform you purchased it on. If you buy the Palace Edition on Steam, the Palace Porsche, outfits, and DLC cars will automatically be available in your Steam version of the game without any additional linking required on the EA side.
Is there a drag racing mode in Unbound?
No, Need for Speed Unbound does not feature a dedicated drag racing mode like those seen in older entries such as Underground 2 or ProStreet. The racing disciplines are divided into Sprint races (point-to-point), Circuit races (laps), and Pursuit races (evading the police). However, you can still manually upgrade your car for extreme straight-line speed and challenge other players in open-world head-to-head sprints, which scratches a similar itch.






