PS1

Ridge Racer Revolution

Ridge Racer Revolution est la suite améliorée du révolutionnaire Ridge Racer, avec de nouveaux circuits, des graphismes retravaillés et l'apparition du véhicule iconique 'Rage Racer'. Ce volet a affiné les mécaniques de drift et introduit des modes contre-la-montre, consolidant la réputation de Namco pour les courses arcades parfaites sur PlayStation.

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Date de sortie
January 1, 1995
Développeur
Namco
Éditeur
Namco
Joueurs
1
Région
US
Taille du ROM
3.3 MB

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Systèmes de jeu

The player drives using automatic transmission or manual transmission . Ridge Racer Revolution supports Namco's NeGcon controller, and adds a rear-view mirror when using the in-car view . The game consists of three courses: 'Novice', 'Intermediate' (also called 'Advanced'), and 'Expert', each having different sections opened, and incorporates modes from the original game; Race, against eleven opponents, and Time Trial, against one. Ridge Racer Revolution adds a mode: Free Run, in which there are no other cars and the player practises driving. There is no lap limit. How fast the cars run depends on which speed grade is used, selectable in Free Run, and can be unlocked for Race. It is not available in Time Trial. A new feature is the option to select the time of day in which the race takes place, although this is not available at the start of the game. Ridge Racer Revolution features a two-player link-up mode which allows the players access to the original Ridge Racer' s courses known as 'Special 1' and 'Special 2'. There are two modes in two-player link-up: Race, identical to its single-player counterpart, and Versus, where only the players race against each other. Versus features a handicap option, increasing the speed of the trailing car. Like the first Ridge Racer , the player normally starts with four cars. The remaining eight are selectable on winning the mini game before the title screen (the mini game is Galaga '88 instead of the original game's Galaxian ). They are mostly unchanged; their names (certain cars are named after other Namco titles) and specifications are similar to the first game. After the player wins the first three circuits, reversed versions are unlocked, and Time Trial features an additional opponent driving a secret car. There are three secret cars; the '13th Racing' (from the first Ridge Racer ) of the Novice course, and the new '13th Racing Kid' (of the Intermediate course) and 'White Angel' (of the Expert course), the car featured on the cover art. These cars are unlocked upon winning the respective course's Time Trial race. Ridge Racer Revolution features two hidden modes; 'Drift Contest', where points are earned according to how well spins are performed on certain corners, and 'Pretty Racer' (also known as 'Buggy mode'), in which the cars size appears with deformed body sizes, similar to Choro-Q cars, which led to the arcade game Pocket Racer . Mirrored tracks that function identically to the original game are accessible. Like the first game, a music CD can be inserted and listened to instead of the soundtrack. Unlike the first game, only the last course played is loaded into the PlayStation's memory; to switch, the game disc needs to be reinserted before loading.

Critiques médias

GameSpot
5.9/10
Famitsu
9/10
Edge
7/10
Electronic Gaming Monthly
9/10

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