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MotoGP: Ultimate Racing Technology, known in the United States as simply MotoGP, is a Grand Prix motorcycle racing video game for Game Boy Advance, Xbox, [3] Microsoft Windows, mobile phones, and N-Gage. It is based on the 2001 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season. The game's features include weather effects, a dynamic replay mode and custom ...
MotoGP: Ultimate Racing Technology 2 is a Grand Prix motorcycle racing video game developed by Climax Brighton for the Xbox, Microsoft Windows, and mobile phones. It was the second title in THQ 's MotoGP series and based on the 2002 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season .
2009-10-22 Forza Motorsport 4: Turn 10 Studios: Microsoft Studios: X360 2011-10-11 Forza Motorsport 5: Turn 10 Studios: Microsoft Studios: XBO 2013-11-22 Forza Motorsport 6: Turn 10 Studios: Microsoft Studios: WIN, XBO 2015-09-15 Forza Motorsport 6: Apex: Turn 10 Studios: Microsoft Studios: WIN 2016-09-06 Forza Motorsport 7: Turn 10 Studios ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. ... MotoGP 09/10; MotoGP 10/11; MotoGP 13; MotoGP 14; MotoGP 15; MotoGP 17; MotoGP 18 ...
MotoGP: Ultimate Racing Technology 3 is a motorcycle video game released in 2005. It is similar to MotoGP 2 but represents the 2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season.The game also features an Extreme Mode which is completely different from MotoGP class Counterparts featuring fictional road motorcycles and fictional representations of real-life locations & cities of respective MotoGP Circuits ...
The PC version features a total of eight tracks, four of which are unlockable, while the PlayStation version adds two tracks for a total of ten. [10] A multiplayer option is also available, allowing two players to compete over a LAN or Internet on the PC [9] or split screen on the PlayStation version. [10]
MotoGP 14 is a video game developed by Milestone.. The game was released in 2014 for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, PlayStation Vita and Xbox 360.On 10 June 2014, Milestone announced that the game would be released in North America on 4 November and that Bandai Namco Entertainment would be the distributor for this region. [3]
The sidecar class left the series to form its own championship after 1996. In 2002, 990cc bikes replaced the 500c bikes and the class was renamed as MotoGP. [2] 660cc bikes replaced the 250cc bikes in 2010, with the class rebranded as Moto2. [3] Starting 2012, the Moto3 class (250cc one cylinder) replaced the 125cc class.