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The Wii version of Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit has very little in common with its Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 and Windows counterparts. This version was designed by a different company (Exient Entertainment), and was a completely different game in nearly every virtual aspect: graphics, soundtrack, racing modes, gameplay, and customization.
Aftermarket customization of video game vehicles was an aspect first introduced by the Need for Speed series after the release of the film, The Fast and the Furious; the feature was included in every Need for Speed title developed by EA Black Box from Need for Speed: Underground through Need for Speed: Undercover. [2]
Need for Speed: Web Racing was an online-only conversion of Need for Speed III: Hot Pursuit made available in 2001 as part of EA.com's Platinum service. 11 cars and various courses from Need for Speed III were included, as well as one course from the first Need for Speed. Single-player and Multiplayer modes were made available.
The Need for Speed; Need for Speed II; Need for Speed III: Hot Pursuit; Need for Speed: High Stakes; Need for Speed: Porsche Unleashed; Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit 2; Need for Speed: Underground; Need for Speed: Underground 2; Need for Speed: Most Wanted (2005 video game) Need for Speed: Carbon; Need for Speed: ProStreet; Need for Speed ...
Cars (video game) Castle of Magic; Castlevania: Order of Shadows; ... Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit (2010 video game) Need for Speed: Shift; Night at the Museum: Battle ...
As with other games in the Need for Speed series, Hot Pursuit 2 features real-world cars, including the Mercedes-Benz CLK GTR (pictured).. Different versions of the game were produced for each game platform; the Xbox, GameCube, and Microsoft Windows versions were developed in EA Seattle, a subsidiary of EA Canada, while the PlayStation 2 version was developed by EA Black Box in Vancouver ...
Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit may refer to one of the following video games: Need for Speed III: Hot Pursuit, by EA Canada, released in 1998; Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit 2, by EA Black Box, released in 2002; Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit (2010 video game), by Criterion Games, released in 2010
With police pursuits reintegrated into the game, Hot Pursuit ' s gameplay now consists of two categories. The first encompasses standard racing, as it has been in its predecessors, The Need for Speed and Need for Speed II, in which the player is allowed to race against one (including split-screen races) or seven other racers in normal circuit racers, knockouts, or tournaments (which allow the ...