These are necessary if you want to max out the trophies but they also unlock new characters to drive as. You’ll have to plan your use of boost smartly and put in a very efficient lap if you want to get three stars on any of the tracks and it is here where you’ll really rely on the drifting and ground tricks in order to shave the required seconds off of your best lap time.Īside from the star rating on all the events, the game also has a large list of challenges called ‘skill checks’ and these are in-game achievements that ask for such things as taking out multiple enemies with certain weapons, completing laps in backwards driving mode and various over a hundred other tasks. Interestingly, while most of the game won’t put up too stiff a challenge for people going for the platinum, the best lap challenges are oddly tough. The drifting is simplified compared to the likes of the Ridge Racer games but feels natural and the trick stuff isn’t going to require the dexterity of a Tony Hawk game and it fits in reasonably well too. This will put you ‘in the zone’ and gives you a sustained turbo charge and allows you to ram enemies. Moving it left and right lets you bash into your opponents as well, scuppering their showboating attempts.Īll of this flashy driving increases your boost meter – and certain parts of the track will increase it faster if you pull the right trick there – and you can either use this for a quick turbo charge or let it fill up before you activate. Aside from the standard racing mechanics, the game also has a good drift system and the right analog stick is mapped to four basic tricks in the air (front flip, back flip, spin and barrel roll) while on the ground it allows you to switch to backwards driving mode or puts you up on two wheels. The controls are deeper than you might imagine for what appears to be a kids’ game. These different types of events all offer different twists to the gameplay and none of them are unenjoyable thanks to the decent on-track action. Here you can take part in regular races, battle races (which are races with weapons), stunt events, best lap time trials and takedown battles (which see you rampaging through a packed field of drone cars). The main structure of the game is based around the ‘Events’ part of the menu. You can pretty much forget about the story and just focus on the content and thankfully Cars 3: Driven to Win has plenty. There are key races from the film that you can have but you can play these as any car, not just Lightning McQueen the film’s main character, and still advance the story. The game ties in with the new movie, Cars 3, but gives the story the minimum of attention and instead focuses more on giving you a Mario Kart style racer instead. So when Cars 3: Driven to Win showed up in my review pile, I wasn’t expecting much from it. The games are usually good for an easy trophy/achievement set and not much more. Computer animation always feels too cold and clinical to me and anyway all these films have the same plot and I’m not ten years old. I’ve never really bought into the whole Pixar thing. Jin PS4 tagged cars 3 / driven to win / driving / kids / pixar by Richie
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |