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Art of Rally (stylized as art of rally) is a racing video game developed and published by Funselektor Labs. The game was released on September 23, 2020 for Windows, macOS, and Linux; on August 12, 2021 for Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S, and Nintendo Switch; on October 6, 2021 for PlayStation 4 and PlayStation 5; and on January 18, 2024 ports for iOS and Android published by Noodlecake were ...
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Art of Rally; B. Big Run (video game) C. Championship Rally (1991 video game)
V-Rally 3 – PlayStation 2, Xbox, PC. Includes cars from the 2000 to 2002 World Rally Championship and the 2001 to 2002 Super 1600 Junior World Rally Championship. V-Rally 4 – PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC, Nintendo Switch. Richard Burns Rally (2004) – PlayStation 2, Xbox, Gizmondo, PC. Xpand Rally – PC. Xpand Rally Xtreme – PC.
Pikes Peak DLC Pack: Peugeot 405 T16, Renault 5 Turbo and Suzuki Escudo. A playable demo featuring the Rallye Sanremo was released on the PlayStation Store and the Xbox Games Store on December 24, 2015. As of New Years Day, the demo is not available on Steam. [4] A second demo themed around the Rally Mexico was released in 2016. [5]
Supports cross-buy (game can be played at no additional cost if one owns the PlayStation VR version) CP: Supports cross-play: GD: Game demo also available for free PlayStation VR2-exclusive ‡ Double-dagger indicates games that include both VR and non-VR modes on PlayStation 5.
EA Sports WRC features 78 rally cars. [1] 10 Groups Rally cars are from the World Rally Championship, including three Rally1 vehicles such as the Puma of M-Sport, the i20 N of Hyundai and the GR Yaris of Toyota and seven other cars from the support categories — the World Rally Championship-2 and the Junior World Rally Championship, including Ford Fiesta Rally3 — as well as 68 classic rally ...
Dirt Rally 2.0 is the first game in the series to be developed by Codemasters after game director Paul Coleman's departure from the company in early 2018. [2] Rally drivers Ryan Champion and Jon Armstrong served as consultants throughout the game's development with occasional help from Oliver Solberg, while veteran co-driver Phil Mills lent his voice as the game's English-speaking co-driver.
Following Gremlin's purchase by Infogrames, the company revealed a North American release under the name Test Drive Rally in August 1999. [4] A version of the game for the Nintendo 64 was also planned until Infogrames cancelled the release in February 2000. [5] A Dreamcast version was also reported in October 1999, but did not materialize. [6]