For more information, visit our official store page. Season 5: Build & Dispatch releases September 9th as part of the Year 2 Pass. Get SnowRunner and all the content of Year 1 Pass with SnowRunner Premium Edition. SnowRunner and the Year 2 Pass are available now on PlayStation 4, Xbox One and Nintendo Switch. Season 5 also brings new skins and stickers to all players across a variety of vehicles. These hill-type maps with mild slopes host one of the industrial strongholds of southern Russia, and will be your playground aboard two new TATRA vehicles! Restore and rebuild a TATRA factory to unlock two powerful 8-wheelers, the TATRA FORCE and TATRA PHOENIX, with their signature adaptable axles. Season 5: Build & Dispatch, the first of the four scheduled seasons in the Year 2 Pass, introduces two new summer maps in a new region: Rostov Oblast.
This starts with crossplay on PC across Steam, EGS and the Microsoft Store when Season 5 drops, allowing you to play with more friends than ever before.Ī new summer region with truckloads of new content on September 9
Get your pass now to never miss a phase of new SnowRunner adventures! Each new planned phase of content will also come with free new content and features for all SnowRunners such as cosmetics, New Game+, a breathtaking Immersive Mode and last but not least, Crossplay between all platforms. From new vehicles, to new regions and new activities, the SnowRunner Year 2 Pass has it all. In true SnowRunner fashion, the Year 2 Pass is packed with new and exciting content spread out over 4 seasons. Learn more in today’s Year 2 Pass Trailer!įour new Seasons with a host of new challenges to overcome! The beginning of this fresh SnowRunner year is right around the corner with Season 5: Build & Dispatch, releasing September 9th. The pass promises a ton of new content across four seasons and free new features to all SnowRunners on PlayStation 4, Xbox One and Nintendo Switch. With your feet staying lower to the ground, shorten your stride and quicken your cadence.SnowRunner, the block-buster ultimate off-road driving experience from Saber Interactive and Focus Home Interactive, is gearing up for its second year of post-launch content with the Year 2 Pass. Remember your cadenceĪ faster cadence may not only help reduce the risk of injury, it may keep you upright when running in snow. It doesn’t feel as exciting as prancing around on technical single track, but it’s better than bailing. This helps prevent slipping, spinning, straining a muscle, or doing the splits. Picking up your feet as usual leaves more room for error (falling). This is not the time to show off your technical trail running skills. In snow conditions that you aren’t familiar with, your running gait will inevitably change. RELATED: 10 secrets of winter trail running 4.
Pro tip: sing Eminem to yourself as a metronome instead of using your watch for pace. Enjoy the new terrain and leave your watch at home. Snow running is another opportunity to forget about pace, as the roads and trails look different.
Trail runners are more likely to run by effort rather than pace anyway. It usually requires greater effort than running on either roads or trails. Running in snow can feel more challenging. If the snow is icy, slushy, or slick, YakTrax or Kahtoola spikes over any kind of running shoe will serve you best. If the snow is fresh and somewhat soft, a regular road or trail shoe will suffice. Your footwear depends on the snow conditions. Embrace the skier mentality, and know the snow. On the west coast, it’s snow-crete, and in the rockies it’s champagne powder. Snow can be fresh, packed, icy, a dusting, slushy, or dry. Like trail running, snow has its own dictionary. There’s a reason there are 50 words for snow in the Inuit culture.
RELATED: Weekend weather: trails across Canada So when trail conditions call for snow, follow these not-so slippery steps to make the most of your run. When snow hits the trails, we can look like an awkward and confused deer at its first high school dance.
Since Canadian weather can be unpredictable, trail runners need to know how to prepare for the white stuff. However, trail running on dirt in Canada isn’t always available. We can talk about it endlessly and run on it forever. As trail runners, our first love is dirt.