First go I was all over the place in proper WTF fashion. A very weird experience coming from Ferarri Challenge. Then I remembered I couldn’t play the PS2 game in third person at all, switched to bumper view and after a couple of races I was getting back into the flick-the-thumbstick, physics defying, dancing on ice handling of Initial D. Gotta love it.
The game is nicely presented, wicked m.o.v.e intro. The first thing you notice is there are fewer game modes than IDSS. There’s no story mode that follows Takumi, instead a sort of hybrid of the old arcade mode with story scenes in between. The best thing about this mode is you can now choose what parts to spend your points on in the garage. You can choose any car to start with and race to buy loads of upgrades. This suits Initial D perfectly because you could start with the 86 and tune it to compete with all the harder opponents if you wanted. You can also earn features to alter your own manga style avatar.
Time attack seems very comprehensive, which is good because its just as important here. Lets face it, overtaking AI on some of these tracks is clumsy at best.
Track design is a touge dream. Some glorious hairpins that will take some serious practice to negotiate scrape free.
The game is relatively easy to navigate but it was so nice to have an English manual to hand for the garage etc.
Graphically, its not as awful as I was expecting. 4th stage is a lazy Naomi 2 – Lindbergh upgrade and its certainly not a looker but the road surfaces are nice and the basic 3D models look very anime. I’m no expert on these things but I think its 60fps, its very slick anyway, even if the cars do look like toys moving around the track. I like the 3D touches to the cut scenes too.
Sound is as expected. Not the best engine noises in the business. Character chatter. God awful yet strangely brilliant Eurobeat is present. Tracks are selectable before a race. Proper embarrassing but you still want to crank it up arcade style.
Overall, if you like the PS2 game, you’ll like this. Super twitchy 1 on 1 racing on tight tracks aint everyones cup of tea and the game is really lacking in terms of content and variety, but as a home version of Arcade Stage 4, it’s a nice package. Pure arcade fun for fans of the anime/manga.
The game is nicely presented, wicked m.o.v.e intro. The first thing you notice is there are fewer game modes than IDSS. There’s no story mode that follows Takumi, instead a sort of hybrid of the old arcade mode with story scenes in between. The best thing about this mode is you can now choose what parts to spend your points on in the garage. You can choose any car to start with and race to buy loads of upgrades. This suits Initial D perfectly because you could start with the 86 and tune it to compete with all the harder opponents if you wanted. You can also earn features to alter your own manga style avatar.
Time attack seems very comprehensive, which is good because its just as important here. Lets face it, overtaking AI on some of these tracks is clumsy at best.
Track design is a touge dream. Some glorious hairpins that will take some serious practice to negotiate scrape free.
The game is relatively easy to navigate but it was so nice to have an English manual to hand for the garage etc.
Graphically, its not as awful as I was expecting. 4th stage is a lazy Naomi 2 – Lindbergh upgrade and its certainly not a looker but the road surfaces are nice and the basic 3D models look very anime. I’m no expert on these things but I think its 60fps, its very slick anyway, even if the cars do look like toys moving around the track. I like the 3D touches to the cut scenes too.
Sound is as expected. Not the best engine noises in the business. Character chatter. God awful yet strangely brilliant Eurobeat is present. Tracks are selectable before a race. Proper embarrassing but you still want to crank it up arcade style.
Overall, if you like the PS2 game, you’ll like this. Super twitchy 1 on 1 racing on tight tracks aint everyones cup of tea and the game is really lacking in terms of content and variety, but as a home version of Arcade Stage 4, it’s a nice package. Pure arcade fun for fans of the anime/manga.
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