Screamer 2

Screamer 2 is a video game developed by Milestone and published by Virgin Interactive Entertainment, released on September 30, 1996 in North America and November 15, 1996 in Europe.[1] It is the second game in the Screamer series. Unlike its predecessor, which drew heavily from Namco's Ridge Racer, Screamer 2 moved towards a rally-oriented style, replacing the six high-performance road cars of the previous game with four rally cars.

Screamer 2
Developer(s)Milestone
Publisher(s)Virgin Interactive Entertainment
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows, DOS
Release
  • NA: September 30, 1996
  • EU: November 15, 1996[1]
Genre(s)Racing
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

The game supports up to two players using a split screen and up to four players over a network.[2]

Reviews

GameSpot gave it a 7.0 out of 10, praising the graphics, soundtrack and the price, but criticizing the car's physics.[3] A Next Generation critic hailed it as "one of the first PC racing games to achieve console-like frame rates and outstanding arcade control." He commented positively on the variety of tracks, the texture maps, the techno soundtrack, the multiplayer modes, and the fact that the enemy AI is designed to make occasional mistakes, and scored the game 4 out of 5 stars.[4] Air Hendrix of GamePro commented, "Screamer 2 screeches onto the PC with the kind of addictive fender-bashing found in console titles like Daytona. But here's the catch: To get both decent graphics and speed on this track, you really need something in the Pentium 166 range." He particularly noted the realistically moving cars and the need to play in lo-res mode when using medium-level hardware.[5] Coming Soon Magazine rated it 89/100, praising both the game play and the graphics.[6]

gollark: Apart from the `unwrap`s this seems reasonable.
gollark: How rustaceoformic.
gollark: <@356107472269869058> How has your rustaceoformic programming gone?
gollark: Oh, I was worried you were talking about me, but not actually that worried since I checked search and there wasn't anything so it was probably just (in that hypothetical world where you were talking about me) you lying for unknowable purposes.
gollark: ↓ LyricLy, completely and utterly.

References

  1. Screamer 2 - PC / Windows - gamepressure.com
  2. "Screamer 2". GamePro. No. 99. IDG. December 1996. p. 96.
  3. Screamer 2 Review - GameSpot.com Archived 2013-09-21 at the Wayback Machine
  4. "Screamer 2". Next Generation. No. 25. Imagine Media. January 1997. pp. 186, 188.
  5. "PC GamePro Review: Screamer 2". GamePro. No. 100. IDG. January 1997. p. 65.
  6. Screamer 2 - PC Review - Coming Soon Magazine
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