New York Race

NYR: New York Race, also known as New York Race, is a science fiction racing game based on the film The Fifth Element directed by Luc Besson released in 2001.[1] Many of the characters from the film are playable, including characters that did not have a significant role in the film, and lacked names.

NYR: New York Race
Developer(s)Kalisto Entertainment
Publisher(s)Wanadoo Edition
Platform(s)PlayStation 2, PC, Game Boy Color
Release
  • EU: 17 November 2001
Genre(s)Racing game
Mode(s)Single-player, Multi-player, LAN and Internet

Gameplay

The player may choose between 25 unlockable vehicles, each with their own unique advantages and disadvantages, which fit into three categories:

  • Speeders have good acceleration but weak shields.
  • Hovercars are general 'all round' vehicles.
  • Cruisers are very slow, but have extremely good shielding.

In the game, New York is set not only to be large horizontally, it is also set to be large vertically for the city is several miles high as well as a few miles wide. Within the game, There are also 12 different courses around New York City, each being grouped into one of the four district groups which are:

  • Middle Class Set in the middle parts of New York, fairly lively with middle class businesses and fairly bright.
  • Jet Set Around the top of New York's very high towers bearing beautiful aesthetics, being quite lively and really bright.
  • The Slums The base of New York's great towers, they consist of dirty areas such as Sewers or Dumps, they are very dark and foggy and hardly any traffic ever goes in the areas of this district group.
  • Chinatown The Chinese district group of the city, bearing lively streets, very beautiful aesthetics and contains some parts of slight darkness and fair brightness.

Reception

Eurogamer gave the game 6 out of 10, concluding "New York Race is a fun little arcade racer which oozes style, but it's something you'll grow tired of extremely quickly and as such remains fun only in short bursts."[2]

gollark: Actually playing => fairness more than random luck => fairness.
gollark: Also, TJ09 probably just treats it as a funny thing to look at in mornings.
gollark: Can be fixed, but people say "butbutbut my rare thing" and it stops.
gollark: I personally diislike it for randomly giving people ultrarares.
gollark: "lalalalala, fulfilling 2G prize IOU... where'd my prize go?!"

References

  1. NYR at Gamespot
  2. Taylor, Martin (November 15, 2001). "NY Race Review". Eurogamer. Archived from the original on November 10, 2014. Retrieved May 11, 2013.
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