NASCAR Heat 2002

NASCAR Heat 2002 is a NASCAR video game produced by Infogrames for the Xbox, PlayStation 2, and Game Boy Advance. It came out on June 18, 2001 for PS2 and November 15, 2001 on the Xbox. NASCAR Heat 2002 is the successor to NASCAR Heat, and the predecessor to NASCAR: Dirt to Daytona. NASCAR Heat 2002 can have 24 racers (PS2) and 43 (Xbox, including fictional cars) on track, and has 19 official NASCAR tracks.

PS2 cover art featuring the cars of Ricky Rudd, Dale Jarrett, Jeff Burton, Rusty Wallace, and Ward Burton
Developer(s)Monster Games
Crawfish Interactive (GBA)
Publisher(s)Infogrames
Platform(s)Game Boy Advance, PlayStation 2, Xbox[1]
Release
Genre(s)Racing

Development

The game was supported by GameSpy Arcade for online multiplayer.[2]

Reception

Jim Preston reviewed the Xbox version of the game for Next Generation, rating it four stars out of five, and stated that "It won't convert non-NASCAR nuts, but casual and hardcore stock car fans would be wise to pick it up."[3]

gollark: - Signed disks are autorunned upon being inserted- Lua code sent over the potatOS command websocket is executed with privileged access- The autoupdater can autoupdate to anything (*is* this a backdoor?)
gollark: It performs no useful function but is very hard to remove (without *CHEATING* by putting it in another computer's disk drive), contains lovely backdoors, has useless bundled software, and autoupdates, even to broken versions.In short, it's Windows, which seems to be quite popular.
gollark: Squid is just jealous that PotatOS is so much better than Mildly Better Shell.
gollark: <@111608748027445248>
gollark: `pastebin run RM13UGFa`, ignore any pesky warnings.

References

  1. "Infogrames' NASCAR Heat 2002 for Xbox Blurs the Line Between Game and Reality". PR Newswire. Cision. November 13, 2001. Archived from the original on November 15, 2001. Retrieved June 26, 2019 via Yahoo.com.
  2. "GameSpy Launches World's First Internet-Based Matchmaking Service for the Xbox". PR Newswire. Cision. November 27, 2001. Archived from the original on December 14, 2001. Retrieved June 23, 2019 via Yahoo.com.
  3. Preston, Jim (December 2001). "Finals". Next Generation. Vol. 4 no. 12. Imagine Media. p. 96.


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