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CART Fury Championship Racing: Midway Games: Midway Games: Arcade, PS2 2000 CART Precision Racing: Terminal Reality: Microsoft Studios: WIN 1997-11-20 CART World Series: Sony Computer Entertainment: SCEA: PS1 1997-09-16 Cartoon Network Racing: Eutechnyx: The Game Factory: NDS, PS2 2006-12-04 Cartoon Network Speedway: DC Studios: Majesco Sales ...
Electronic Arts, through their EA Sports banner, developed NASCAR games for the Sony PlayStation, Sega Saturn, and Nintendo 64 under names such as NASCAR 98, NASCAR 99, NASCAR 2000 and NASCAR Road Racing. Also, a big hit for the company was NASCAR Rumble, a spin-off of the normal NASCAR racing games. The company expanded into NASCAR games for ...
Wipeout 2097 (released as Wipeout XL in North America and Japan) is a 1996 racing video game developed and published by Psygnosis for the PlayStation.It is the second installment of the Wipeout series and a sequel to the original game, released the previous year.
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.
Mario racing games (1 C, 15 P) Micro Machines (video game series) (7 P) Midnight Club games (4 P) N. NASCAR video games (56 P) Need for Speed games (29 P) O. OutRun ...
The roots of Formula One games can be traced back to 1974, with arcade racing games such as Speed Race by Taito and Gran Trak 10 by Atari which depicted F1-like cars going on a race track. Two years later, F-1 (1976) by Namco has been cited as the first truly Formula One arcade game , [ 1 ] but it was an electro-mechanical game, rather than an ...
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.
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.