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Car & Driver Presents: Grand Tour Racing '98: Eutechnyx: Activision: PS1: 1997-09-30 Car and Driver (video game) Lerner Research: Electronic Arts: DOS 1992 Car Town: Cie Games Glu Mobile: FMP, iOS 2010-07-27 Car Wars: Texas Instruments: Texas Instruments: TI-99/4A 1981 Carmageddon: Stainless Games: Sales Curve Interactive, Interplay Productions
For games that were originally released as freeware, see List of freeware video games. For free and open-source games, and proprietary games re-released as FLOSS, see List of open-source video games. For proprietary games with released source code (and proprietary or freeware content), see List of commercial video games with available source code.
Racing video games are one of the most traditional of video game genres. They typically place the player in the driver seat of a high performance vehicle, or driving other mechanical or carriage vehicles and require the player to race against other drivers or compete in timed runs.
Weapon-based racing games include games such as Full Auto, Rumble Racing, Grip: Combat Racing, Re-Volt and Blur. There are also Vehicular combat games that employ racing games elements: for example, racing has been featured as a game mode in popular vehicular combat franchises such as Twisted Metal, Destruction Derby and Carmageddon.
Controls in Real Racing 3 are similar to that of its predecessors. The player is given seven different control methods from which to choose: "Tilt A", chosen by default, features accelerometer steering (tilting the physical device to the left to turn left and to the right to turn right), auto accelerate and manual brake; "Tilt B" features accelerometer steering, manual accelerate and manual ...
Blur (stylized as blur) is a 2010 arcade-style racing video game for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360. It was developed by Bizarre Creations and published by Activision. Blur features a racing style that incorporates real world cars and locales with arcade style handling and vehicular combat.
Prior to the division between arcade-style racing and sim racing, the earliest attempts at providing driving simulation experiences were arcade racing video games, dating back to Pole Position, [25] a 1982 arcade game developed by Namco, which the game's publisher Atari publicized for its "unbelievable driving realism" in providing a Formula 1 experience behind a racing wheel at the time.
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