Chocobo Racing

Chocobo Racing, known in Japan as Chocobo Racing: Genkai e no Rōdo (チョコボレーシング 〜幻界へのロード〜, lit. "Chocobo Racing: Road to the Spirit World"), is a racing game for the PlayStation game console. The game was developed by Square Co., creators of the Final Fantasy series of video games. The game was released in Japan in March 1999. North American and European releases followed that year.

Chocobo Racing
North American cover art
Developer(s)Square
Publisher(s)
  • JP: Square
  • NA: Square Electronic Arts
Director(s)Takashi Tokita
Producer(s)Shinji Hashimoto
Artist(s)Toshiyuki Itahana
Writer(s)Takashi Tokita
Composer(s)Kenji Ito
SeriesChocobo
Platform(s)PlayStation
Release
  • JP: March 18, 1999
  • NA: August 10, 1999
  • EU: October 11, 1999
  • JP: February 10, 2009 (PSOne Classic)[1]
Genre(s)Racing
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

As a formulaic kart racer, Chocobo Racing is often compared to Mario Kart and Crash Team Racing.[2] The game's star and namesake is the Chocobo, the mascot of the Final Fantasy series. Other figures from the game series, such as Mog the Moogle, the Black Mage, and Cid, fill out the all-Final Fantasy cast.[3] Most of the game's soundtrack is composed using songs from previous Final Fantasy titles.

The game was later released in Japan alongside Chocobo Stallion and Dice de Chocobo as part of the Chocobo Collection. On December 20, 2001, the game was re-released individually as part of the PSone Books series. The game received generally average reviews, citing its low quality in several aspects of gameplay.[2][4]

It was released in Japan as a PSOne Classic on February 10, 2009.[5]

Gameplay

In Chocobo Racing, the player controls Final Fantasy-inspired characters, most of whom race in go-karts. Other characters fly, drive scooters, ride magic carpets, or even run.[6] Players have five different racing modes to choose from: Story Mode, Versus Mode, Grand Prix, Relay Race, and Time Attack. In the Story Mode, players are guided through the story of Chocobo Racing, which is narrated by Cid, in the form of an onscreen version of a pop-up book. Players who complete the Story Mode are given the chance to customize their own racer; completing the Story Mode also unlocks secret character racers.[7] In the Versus Mode, two players can race each other on a horizontally split screen, where one player races viewing the top half of the screen and the other player races viewing the bottom half. In Grand Prix (GP) Mode, the player races computer-controlled opponents in four selected tracks of their choice. In Relay Race Mode, the player chooses three racers to compete in a relay match.[8] In Time Attack Mode, the player can select any stage and try to beat the fastest time record set there.[9] There are ten track options: Cid's Test Track, Moogle Forest, The Ancient Gate, Mythril Mines, The Black Manor, Floating Gardens, Gingerbread Land, Vulcan-O Valley, Fantasia, and F.F.VIII Circuit.[10]

While racing, the player can accelerate, brake, reverse, activate Magic Stones, or use a "special ability" using the game controller's analog stick and buttons. An additional move is the skid, which is executed by simultaneously braking and accelerating into a turn; as the game's cornering technique, the skid can be used to take sharp turns quickly. If the player skids too sharply, however, a spin out will occur. Before the start of any race, the player's character receives a speed boost if the player accelerates at the correct time during the countdown.[11]

In this example screenshot, the White Mage activates the "Barrier" ability to defend against magical attacks. The "special ability" gauge in the upper left-hand corner of the screen will not recharge until the Barrier vanishes.

In the world of Chocobo Racing, Magic Stones are scattered throughout each course, and can be picked up by the player by driving through them. Magic Stones can also be stolen from opponent players by bumping into another player. The player can then activate the Magic Stone for some special effect. Activating a Haste Stone, for example, gives the character a short speed boost. In some Magic Stones, the power of the stone increases if more than one of the same stone is picked up by the player. Each stone is represented by a corresponding symbol on the racetrack, while stones marked with question marks represent random Magic Stones, which grant the player either a Haste Stone, Fire Stone, Ice Stone, Thunder Stone, Minimize Stone, Reflect Stone, Doom Stone, or Ultima Stone.[12]

Special abilities are another important aspect of Chocobo Racing. Before each race, the player is prompted to assign a special ability to the selected character. During a race, the player can only activate the chosen special ability when the meter in the upper left-hand corner of the screen is full. After using the special ability, the player must wait for the meter to recharge to use it again.[13]

Plot

Setting

Chocobo Racing borrows themes and elements from Final Fantasy I to Final Fantasy VI. The Story Mode is narrated by Cid and includes nine chapters in a pop-up book fashion with FMVs. To progress, the player needs to defeat the chapter's respective challenger. Before each chapter begins, the player is given the option of viewing the story or skipping to the race except when playing the Story Mode for the first time.

Characters

The cast of Chocobo Racing is drawn from recurring creatures and characters from the Chocobo's Dungeon and Final Fantasy series. Eight characters -- Chocobo, Mog, Golem, Goblin, Black Magician, White Mage, Chubby Chocobo, and Behemoth—are immediately available, and additional, secret characters such as Cactuar, Bahamut, Cloud, Aya, and Squall may be unlocked after completing Story Mode.[6]

Story

Chapter one, titled "Gadgets a go-go," begins with the inventor Cid presenting Chocobo with a pair of "Jet-Blades" and offers Chocobo a chance to take a test-run with them on the racetrack behind his lab.[14] After the race, Mog the Moogle drops in and asks Cid about the progress of the racing machine he'd commissioned.[15] Cid promises to bring the machine by tomorrow, but later confides to Chocobo he'd forgotten it.[16] The next day, after presenting the doubtful Mog with his scooter,[3] Chocobo and Mog race. After Chocobo wins, Mog confronts Cid over his vehicle's poor performance, but Cid replies that Chocobo won because of the differences in their abilities (i.e., Chocobo's "Dash").[17] He explains that the secret of Chocobo's "Dash" ability is the Blue Crystal on his leg-ring.[18] Mog mulls over his inferior "Flap" ability and decides he wants a Blue Crystal as well, so Cid recommends that the two go on an adventure to find out the secret of the Blue Crystal.[19]

The two head out to discover the secret behind the Blue Crystal, meeting (and racing) many along the way. When they reach Mysidia, the village of mages, a White Mage there notices that all the companions have Magicite, which the companions had previously referred to as "Blue Crystals." The companions want to know the legend behind the Magicite shards; the White Mage agrees to tell them on the condition that they race her in the Floating Gardens, with the story as the winner's prize. Upon winning, she tells them of the legend: "There are Magicite Shards scattered all over the world. It used to be one large Magicite Crystal...But people kept fighting each other over it. So the founder of Mysidia, the great magician Ming-Wu, broke the Crystal into eight pieces. He then scattered the shards to the four winds. He did so to assure later restoration of the Magicite Crystal...when all eight pieces are brought together again."[20]

After this discovery, the companions continue to search for other racers in possession of the crystal shards. Upon defeating Behemoth in a race, the monster joins their ranks, bringing the party's number to eight. The companions then notice that their Magicite shards begin to glow,[21] and Mog discovers that he possessed Magicite all along.[22] The convergence of all eight shards of the Magicite crystal fulfills Ming-Wu's prophecy, and the gate to Fantasia, the Land of the Espers, opens. When the companions arrive in Fantasia, they are greeted by Bahamut, King of the Espers. Bahamut decides to test their worth with a final trial,[23] and welcomes their attempts to defeat him in a race. After the race, Bahamut acknowledges the powers of the group. He goes on to rhetorically ask if the companions knew why Ming-Wu broke up the Magicite, and explains the legend once more.[24] Bahamut is pleased with the companions, noting that humans, moogles, chocobos, and monsters all came together in goodwill. In celebration, he decides to leave the portal between the world and Fantasia open, declaring that "Fantasia shall exist in harmony with your world from this day on."[25]

Upon completion of the Story Mode, players are assigned a number of points determined by their performance, with a maximum of one hundred. Using those points, the player is given the option of creating a racer with customized color and performance. The point value is distributed among five parameters: Max Speed, Acceleration, Grip, Drift, and A.G.S., which determines how fast the racer's ability gauge charges. A maximum of twenty points can be assigned to each of the five racing parameters. Customized racers can be used in all of the game's modes except for the Story Mode, and only the main characters and Bahamut are open to customization.[7]

Development

The first demonstration of Chocobo Racing was at the Fall Tokyo Game Show '98; it was then unclear if there would be a North American release. IGN editors noted its striking similarities to Mario Kart.[26] In the release of Chocobo's Dungeon 2, a bonus CD included a video clip of the game.[27] Originally slated to be released in late September/October, the release date was moved to August 1999 because "It was done early, and is now ready to go".[28] Square worked with toy company Choro Qi to produce toy cars for the release of the game.[29]

Music

Chocobo Racing Original Soundtrack is a soundtrack album produced by Square. It was released in Japan on March 25, 1999 by DigiCube, and sold roughly 35,000 units.[30] Almost all of the tracks are arrangements of music Nobuo Uematsu composed for Final Fantasy games, arranged by Kenji Ito.[30] The only exception is the song played during the final song, "Treasure Chest In The Heart", which is a vocal track orchestrated by Shirō Hamaguchi and performed by Hiromi Ohta. In the English version of the game, it is performed by Vicki Bell.[30]

Reception

Reception
Aggregate score
AggregatorScore
GameRankings61%[31]
Review scores
PublicationScore
AllGame[32]
EGM6.0 of 10[31]
Famitsu30 of 40[33]
Game Informer6.25 of 10[31]
GameSpot4.4 of 10[2]
IGN5.6 of 10[4]
Next Generation[34]

Chocobo Racing sold 300,000 units in Japan.[35] Doug Perry of IGN said the game was an attempt by Square to "cash in" on the popular kart racer genre created by Nintendo's successful Mario Kart.[4] Other reviewers agreed, calling it “a tired rehash” due to its colorful but unpolished graphics, crude track designs, and poor controls.[2][36]

Daniel Erickson reviewed the PlayStation version of the game for Next Generation, rating it two stars out of five, and stated that "Wait for Crash Team Racing to fill your PlayStation kart-racing slot."[34]

1UP.com's Final Fantasy Retro Roundup stated that it was a “decent game” ruined by the necessity of steering with a D-pad, and was rated "Not Worth It".[37] Many similarities were noted with Mario Kart such as similar course themes and the need to "power slide".[2][36] It was also called too easy, with story mode lasting only two hours and there being limited replay value except for the unlocking of secret characters and courses.[36] Other critiques included a lack of a battle mode and limited customization.[4][36] The music was thought to be average, though the last song of the story mode was “strikingly beautiful”.[36]

Cancelled sequel

At Nintendo's E3 2010 press conference on June 15, 2010, a new Chocobo Racing title, tentatively titled Codename: Chocobo Racing 3D, was announced for the Nintendo 3DS handheld system.[38] However, on October 10, 2013, Takashi Tokita, director of the original Chocobo Racing, confirmed that the project had been cancelled, noting that had he been part of its development process, he "would have made sure that it came out."[39]

gollark: Rustc is honestly kind of slow and bad.
gollark: No it wouldn't.
gollark: Er, semiprime number.
gollark: I'm working on a way to uninstall it *if* you factor a 15-digit prime number.
gollark: It can also be interpreted as `best in the world`.

References

  1. "チョコボレーシング ~幻界へのロード~". PlayStation.com(Japan). Sony. 2009-02-09. Archived from the original on 2013-11-09. Retrieved 2009-02-10.
  2. James Mielke (1999). "Chocobo Racing for PlayStation Review". www.gamespot.com. Retrieved 20 May 2006.
  3. Mog: "Hey, Cid...you don't mean THIS thing's the world's fastest racing machine!?" (Chocobo Racing)
  4. Doug Perry (1999). "IGN: Chocobo Racing Review". www.ign.com. Archived from the original on 25 September 2012. Retrieved 21 May 2006.
  5. "チョコボレーシング ~幻界へのロード~". PlayStation.com(Japan). Sony. 2009-02-09. Archived from the original on 2013-11-09. Retrieved 2009-02-10.
  6. Square Enix staff, ed. (1999). Chocobo Racing instruction manual. Square Co. pp. 4–5.
  7. Square Enix staff, ed. (1999). Chocobo Racing instruction manual. Square Co. pp. 6–7.
  8. Square Enix staff, ed. (1999). Chocobo Racing instruction manual. Square Co. pp. 10–11.
  9. Square Enix staff, ed. (1999). Chocobo Racing instruction manual. Square Co. pp. 8–9.
  10. Square Enix staff, ed. (1999). Chocobo Racing instruction manual. Square Co. pp. 22–24.
  11. Square Enix staff, ed. (1999). Chocobo Racing instruction manual. Square Co. pp. 2–3.
  12. Square Enix staff, ed. (1999). Chocobo Racing instruction manual. Square Co. pp. 18–19.
  13. Square Enix staff, ed. (1999). Chocobo Racing instruction manual. Square Co. pp. 16–17.
  14. Cid: "I made a racetrack behind my lab here." (Chocobo Racing)
  15. Mog: "Heh heh heh...I heard that he was gonna make a machine for Chocobo...so I ordered one for myself too!" (Chocobo Racing)
  16. Cid: "I kinda fergot about his machine." (Chocobo Racing)
  17. Cid: "Wh-why of course not! It's all because of the differences in your "abilities", not my machines!" (Chocobo Racing)
  18. Cid: "The secret of Chocobo's "DASH" is the Blue Crystal on his leg-ring." (Chocobo Racing)
  19. Cid: "Say...why don't ya fellas go out on an adventure to find out what that secret is?" (Chocobo Racing)
  20. White Mage: "There are Magicite Shards scattered all over the world. It used to be one large Magicite Crystal...But people kept fighting each other over it. So the founder of Mysidia, the great magician Ming-Wu, broke the Crystal into eight pieces. He then scattered the shards to the four winds. He did so to assure later restoration of the Magicite Crystal...when all eight pieces are brought together again." (Chocobo Racing)
  21. White Mage: "Look! Our Crystals are starting to glow!" (Chocobo Racing)
  22. Mog: "What the...? My totally wicked head-bopper is glowing too!" (Chocobo Racing)
  23. Bahamut: "I shall place upon you a final trial... to see how worthy you really are." (Chocobo Racing)
  24. Bahamut: "That is true. Mankind has fought over the Magicite for aeons..." (Chocobo Racing)
  25. Bahamut: "Fantasia shall exist in harmony with your world from this day on." (Chocobo Racing)
  26. IGN Staff (October 15, 1998). "Chocobo Brings Surprise Extras". www.ign.com. Archived from the original on 25 September 2012. Retrieved 30 May 2006.
  27. IGN Staff (December 11, 1998). "Chocobo Brings Surprise Extras". www.ign.com. Archived from the original on 25 September 2012. Retrieved 30 May 2006.
  28. IGN Staff (May 27, 1999). "Chocobo Racing Moves On Up". www.ign.com. Archived from the original on 25 September 2012. Retrieved 30 May 2006.
  29. Szczepaniak, John (February 2018). The Untold History of Japanese Game Developers. 3. SMG Szczepaniak. p. 194.
  30. Lau, Aaron (25 August 1999). "Chocobo Racing Original Soundtrack". Soundtrack Central. Archived from the original on 11 February 2012. Retrieved 6 April 2008.
  31. "Chocobo Racing - PS". GameRankings. Archived from the original on 25 September 2012. Retrieved 31 March 2008.
  32. Matthew House. "Chocobo Racing". AllGame. Archived from the original on 2014-11-14. Retrieved 22 May 2008.
  33. プレイステーション - チョコボレーシング ~幻界へのロード~. Weekly Famitsu. No.915 Pt.2. Pg.19. 30 June 2006.
  34. Erickson, Daniel (October 1999). "Finals". Next Generation. Vol. 2 no. 2. Imagine Media. p. 114.
  35. "Square Game List". 2002. Archived from the original on 25 September 2012. Retrieved 21 May 2006.
  36. Johnny Liu (1 August 1999). "Game Revolution Review Page". Game Revolution. Archived from the original on 25 September 2012. Retrieved 4 April 2008.
  37. Jeremy Parish (8 December 2007). "Final Fantasy Series Roundup". 1UP.com. Archived from the original on 25 September 2012. Retrieved 31 March 2008.
  38. Nintendo E3 Network | Nintendo 3DS
  39. Spencer (October 10, 2013). "Chocobo Racing 3D, One Of Square Enix's First 3DS Games, Will Never Leave The Coop". Siliconera.com. Archived from the original on October 12, 2013. Retrieved October 12, 2013.

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