Time trials dirt bike game




















Bike racing genre often full of action and interesting to play. If you dream about your own bike but can not buy it this collection will make your dreams come true. It is very old genre. You well known something similar from the first games consoles. Feel yourself like a brave biker. Race on exotic locations and complete tasks or compete with other people in multiplayer racing. You will get a lot of adrenaline and speed. Improve your racing skills to become the best biker ever.

Be careful on the road and beware of obstacles and other vehicles. We can offer to your attention some of our racing entertainments for every platform.

Try Nuclear Motocross. Your goal is to complete levels as fast as possible to achieve maximum score points. Since I'm a huge nerd, I love video games as much as I love motorcycles. Now, in the grand scheme of things, there aren't a lot of motorcycle games out there. There are even fewer good ones.

So I decided to write up a list of my favorite motorcycle games—which are clearly the best motorcycle games ever made since I'm the final arbiter in all matters of taste and style—and present them here for your edification. This was a serious undertaking. I had to dig out a bunch of my old consoles, hook these antiques up to the television in the basement with various adapters, find all my controllers and cables and games, and even scrounge around on eBay, Craigslist, and Amazon for games I didn't have.

I read a bunch of reviews, dug up old magazines 'sup Nintendo Power , and generally spent a bunch of time in the basement playing PlayStation with my daughters. Tough life, right? In doing all this dicking around with video games research, I narrowed down my list to these five games. They span thirty years of game development, three generations of consoles, and run the gamut from point-and-click adventures to hardcore simulation. So, without further ado, let's talk about motorcycle games.

I'll be straight with you guys, Full Throttle isn't just my favorite game on this list, it's in my top five favorite games ever. Unlike more common platformers or side-scrollers popular in that era, the SCUMM games look and play almost like animated graphic novels. Action is largely static or played out through animated cutscenes , and gameplay is a lot of point-and-click environment exploration and puzzle solving.

They're extremely engaging, but they play slow and require a bit more thinking around corners than most modern games do. Now that we got the history lesson out of the way, let's talk about the actual game. Full Throttle takes place in some undetermined, vaguely-defined, cyberpunk-cum-post-apocalyptic future where high-tech biker gangs rule the western highways and only one motorcycle manufacturer is left in the world—Corley Motors.

Players take on the role of Ben, the tough, laconic, gruff-voiced leader of a biker gang called the Full-Throttle Polecats. After a chance meeting with Old Man Corley on a stretch of lonely highway, Ben and the Polecats get tangled up in corporate politics and, as part of a hostile takeover, are framed for the bike mogul's brutal murder.

The rest of the game revolves around Ben's quest to clear his name, spring the Polecats from prison, and bring Corley's real killer to justice. Along the way, he gets mixed up with a mysterious mechanic named Maureen, a plucky investigative reporter from out East, and a handful of other weirdos and fringers. At the end, he finally manages to exonerate himself and the Polecats, saves motorcycling, and then rides off into the sunset after an extremely satisfying final chapter.

To be fair, while I included it in this list, Full Throttle isn't really a game about motorcycles or motorcycling. Aside from one section where you ride through a winding canyon and fight various other biker gangs to get their gear, there's no real riding to do.

Instead, as I mentioned before, it's a whole lot of poking around and puzzle-solving as opposed to actual riding and fighting. At its heart, Full Throttle is a stylish, funny, entertaining murder mystery dressed up in a biker jacket and engineer boots.

That's not necessarily a bad thing—I did say it was in my top five games ever—but it may not be what a lot of modern gamers are looking for. As players progress through the game, the tracks become progressively longer and more difficult which adds a decent amount of challenge to what is, after all, a pretty limited number of tracks.

Throughout each race, players are beset by opposing traffic, fellow riders armed with chains, pipes, and crowbars, oblivious pedestrians, and aggressive cops trying to shut down the race. Players who manage to outrace and outfight their opponents enough to place in the top three get a pile of cash with which to buy new bikes, pay any legal fees—you can get busted by the cops and fined heavily if you're unlucky enough — or repair damaged rides.

Thrash mode is a simple, arcade-style mode where you jump on a bike, pick a track, and go. No character selection, no frills, just ride or die. Big Game mode, on the other hand, is the game's "campaign mode" for lack of a better term.

In Big Game mode, you select from a list of eight characters, each with their own stats and unique starting bikes, cash, and weapons. This cast of bike weirdos is surprisingly diverse for a mids product, features men, women, and riders of color, which is a pleasant departure from the "all white dudes all the time" cast that a lot of games of that time had.

All non-racing parts of the game take place in either a biker bar called Der Panzer Klub or a bike shop next door called Olley's Skoot-a-Rama. Between races, players can gossip with fellow riders—a system that gives players good gameplay hints and information on different tracks and opponents—at the Panzer Klub, shop for bikes at Olley's, and sign up for new races. While there is an overarching plot in Big Game mode, it's pretty thin.

Honestly, it's almost non-existent. If you place first in every race over the course of the game, you become the King or Queen of All Street Racers forever — or at least for this racing season. Full motion video clips sprinkled throughout the game help flesh this out a little, but as I said, it's still pretty thin.

It largely doesn't matter though, because you don't play this game to get first place, you play it to run over pedestrians, jump traffic, hit dudes with chains, and generally be a hooligan while listening to the game's killer soundtrack. Speaking of the soundtrack, what really sets Road Rash '95 apart from its predecessor, and makes it so iconic, is its sheer style. The art is dark and moody, and the characters are rendered in this weird, distorted, caricature-like style that looks like something out of a Primus CD insert.

Seriously, there's some straight-up Frizzle Fry or Seas of Cheese art direction going on here. Then there's the music. Man, the soundtrack is fantastic. It features 14 tracks from some of the best bands to come out of the 90s—groups like Soundgarden and Monster Magnet. Warfare Area 2. Sandbox City - Cars, Zombies, Ragdolls! Worms Zone a Slithery Snake.

Dirt Bike Extreme Parkour. Hot games. BuildNow GG. Vex 6. Forward Assault Remix. Build Royale. Stickman Supreme Duelist 2. Rebel Gamio. Mini Royale: Nations. Robber Vs Police: Fighting.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000