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Stunt Driver (also known as Crash Course in some European releases) is a polygonal racing game released for MS-DOS in 1990. It has a feature set similar to Brøderbund's Stunts published the same year, including a track editor, and both games have much in common with Hard Drivin', the Atari Games 3D stunt driving simulator released in February 1989.
Hot Wheels Stunt Track Driver is a racing video game developed by Semi Logic Entertainments and published by Mattel Media for Microsoft Windows. It is based on the Hot Wheels toy franchise, and was released on October 15, 1998. A Game Boy Color version, developed by Lucky Chicken Games, was released in 2000. [1]
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Steep Slope Sliders was met with positive reviews. The Saturn version held a 77% on the review aggregation website GameRankings based on four reviews. [4] Critics praised the game for having varied course designs which accommodate exploration and experimentation, [7] [10] [14] [15] [16] tight controls, [7] [12] [15] [16] numerous unlockables, [7] [12] [14] [15] and fast-moving graphics.
Olivia Summers, left, and Dee Bryant lead the Assn. of Women Drivers, billed as Hollywood's first all-female stunt-driving team. (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)
He also appeared in some documentary shorts and did some (uncredited) stunt driving for the 1936 film Speed, [3] [7] which featured James Stewart in his first starring role. On July 5, 1942, Teter was the last performer at an Army Relief benefit at the Indiana State Fair Grounds. He planned to break his own world distance record by jumping 150 ...
In 2006, Swift became the first Englishman to win a round of the Northern Irish Autotest Championship, driving a borrowed Mini Special. [1] The following season, after winning his seventh British Championship, Swift announced his retirement from auto testing and left his job as a mechanical engineer to concentrate on stunt driving.
The fourth game in the series, Driver: Parallel Lines, was released 14 March 2006 for PlayStation 2 and Xbox in the U.S., and 26 June 2007 for Windows and Wii in the U.S. Reflections intended Parallel Lines to "return the series to its roots" by focusing more on driving. The game differs greatly in other aspects from its predecessors, though ...