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Year Name Platforms Style 2005: 187 Ride or Die: PS2, Xbox: 2017: All-Star Fruit Racing: Microsoft Windows, Xbox One, PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch: Kart racing
Vigilante 8 is a 1998 vehicular combat game developed by Luxoflux and published by Activision for PlayStation, Nintendo 64, and Game Boy Color.Although officially it has no connection to Activision's Interstate '76 series, [4] it features several of its themes including auto-vigilantes, the 1970s time frame, and specific fictional vehicle companies.
A vehicular combat game (or car combat game) is a vehicle simulation video game where the primary gameplay objectives include vehicles armed with weapons attempting to destroy vehicles controlled by the CPU or by opposing players. The genre normally features a variety of different vehicles available for play, each with its own strengths ...
The series has appeared on the PlayStation, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and PlayStation 3. As of October 31, 2000, the series has sold 5 million copies. [1] Several of the games in the series were re-released as part of the Sony Greatest Hits program. The original game and its first sequel were also released for the PC.
Rage (video game) Rage 2; Ravaged; Ray Tracers; RC Cars; Recoil (video game) Red Faction: Battlegrounds; Redline (1999 video game) Renegade Ops; Return Fire; Return Fire 2; RIGS: Mechanized Combat League; Road Fighter; Road Rage (2017 video game) Road Rash (1991 video game) Road Rash (1994 video game) Road Rash 3; Road Rash 3D; Road Rash 64 ...
Twisted Metal is a 1995 vehicular combat video game developed by Sony Interactive Studios America and SingleTrac, and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation. The game's plot is centered on the titular competition in which various drivers in modified vehicles must destroy the other vehicles in an attempt to be the last one ...
The player's Armoured Lorry under attack from several Martian units.. The game is played from a third-person perspective. The player must navigate three-dimensional environments while controlling various World War I-style military vehicles, such as armoured cars, mobile anti-aircraft platforms, tanks, cannons, motorbikes, and observation balloons. [2]
True, PC players don't have the convenience that console players have and can rent the game, but Rollcage is worth the cash, no matter what system." [25] He also gave the PlayStation version four stars, saying, "If you're into futuristic auto-combat/racing games and looking for something aside from Wipeout, give Rollcage a try. I'm guessing you ...