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Driver was a commercial hit, with sales above 1 million units by early August 1999. [49] In the German market, Driver ' s PlayStation version received a "Gold" award from the Verband der Unterhaltungssoftware Deutschland (VUD) by the end of July, [50] indicating sales of at least 100,000 units across Germany, Austria and Switzerland. [51]
Additional RAM is integrated with the GPU (including a 1 MB framebuffer) and SPU (512 KB), see below for details. Cache RAM for CPU core and CD-ROM. See the relevant sections for details. Flash RAM support through the use of memory cards, see below. BIOS stored on 512 KB ROM
The standalone unit features two Super NES controller ports, a cartridge slot, a dual-speed CD-ROM drive, RCA composite jacks, S-Video, RFU DC OUT (similar to the PlayStation SCPH-1001), a proprietary multi-out AV output port (the same one featured on the Super NES, Nintendo 64, and GameCube), headphone jack on the front, a serial port labelled ...
Driver 76 is a PlayStation Portable game in the Driver series. Set in New York City in 1976, two years before the events in the first half of Driver: Parallel Lines , the player takes the role of Ray, TK's friend and a supporting character from Parallel Lines .
The last digit of the PlayStation model number denotes the region in which it was sold: [14] 0 is Japan (Japanese boot ROM, NTSC-J region, NTSC video, 100 V PSU) 1 is USA/Canada (English boot ROM, NTSC-U/C region, NTSC video, 120 V PSU) 2 is PAL regions (English boot ROM, PAL region, PAL Video, 220-240 V PSU). Sub-models exist differing in ...
Driver 2 (also known as Driver 2: Back on the Streets and as Driver 2: The Wheelman Is Back in North America) is a 2000 action driving video game and the second installment of the Driver series. It was developed by Reflections Interactive and published by Infogrames for PlayStation .
This is a list of games for the Sony PlayStation video game system, organized alphabetically by name. There are often different names for the same game in different regions. [ 1 ] The final licensed PlayStation game released in Japan (not counting re-releases) was Black/Matrix 00 on May 13, 2004; counting re-releases, the final licensed game ...
Players can also push L1 on the PlayStation 3 or the left shoulder button on the Xbox 360 version of the game to perform a special 'ram' attack on cars. The film director mode, which was absent from Parallel Lines, also returns, and players can share their videos on the Driver Club website. [1] The game runs at 60 frames per second. [3]