Stuntman Hollywood brings Fast & Furious stunts to PS5
Stuntman hollywood is coming to PS5 with a stunt-focused game built around movie shoots, episode-based levels and star ratings. The announcement puts Fast & Furious, Back to the Future, Knight Rider, Miami Vice and Death Race into a single arcade-driving framework.
Universal's stunt roster
The game lets players become a stunt performer inside Universal's iconic series, with vehicles that include the Time Machine and KITT. It also adds cars, SUVs, motorcycles and a school bus, which gives the roster a broader range than a single-car nostalgia exercise. For players, that means the hook is not just the brands on screen but the vehicle handling attached to each one.
Stuntman: Hollywood is described as being about filmmaking, not a standard racing loop. The design borrows from the original Stuntman games, Burnout and Split/Second, but the emphasis here is on the controlled chaos of set pieces, precision under pressure and the scorekeeping that turns each run into a performance test.
Episodes and takes
Each film is split into episodes, and each episode is a unique level with its own vehicle and specific gameplay twists. In every episode, the director gives tasks such as drifting through a section, holding a tight line, crashing through obstacles, dodging incoming fire and riding on two wheels. The shoot runs on a timer, and the director allows only a limited number of takes.
Free stunts give players room to skim past a flamethrower, dodge an explosion at the last second and gamble for a more dramatic scene. The game then grades performance with a star system tied to required and free stunts, while tougher director tasks can earn additional stars. More stars translate into a more prestigious stunt award for the film.
Garage and side projects
The Garage tracks new items, trophies and keepsakes earned through progress, giving the game a collection layer beyond the chase for stars. Outside the main films, Stuntman: Hollywood also includes B-roll episodes, short filler films and stunt arenas, which broadens the structure without moving away from the core stunt-work loop.
That mix makes the announcement more than a license parade. By tying Universal Pictures films and NBCUniversal TV shows to timed stunt tasks, the game asks players to treat classic cars and famous TV hardware as production tools, not just collectibles.