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Peak Performance, known in Japan as Tōge MAX: Saisoku Drift Master (峠MAX 最速ドリフトマスター, Tōge Makkusu Saisoku Dorifuto Masutā, lit."Ridge MAX: The Fastest Drift Master"), is a 1997 video game developed by Cave and published by Atlus and JVC Music Europe for the PlayStation.
Genki was also developing a game related although not part of the Shotoku Battle series, The Fast and the Furious, based on the movie franchise of the same name. It was presented at E3 2003 and conceived as an open world game. The game was planned to be published by Vivendi Universal Games and release on PlayStation 2 in late 2003 and the Xbox ...
The game includes Japanese and imported foreign cars. The foreign cars included are Alfa Romeo, Mini, Lotus, DeTomaso, and Volkswagen, depending on the version. Honda was licensed in this game (with some cars localized as Acura models in the US version) but was not available in Tokyo Xtreme Racer 3 due to licensing issues.
The game features a selection of 218 licensed Japanese and European cars. [2] There are also several parodies of cars from anime and manga titles like Initial D, Wangan Midnight and Over Rev!. [3] Unlike past games in the franchise, American manufacturers have been completely omitted.
Release date 1nsane: Invictus Games: Codemasters: Win: 2000-11 2 Fast 2 Furious [1] Digital Bridges dbi Games Java 2004 2 Fast 4 You Digital Dimensions Bi-Fi Roll DOS 1995 2XL ATV Offroad: 2XL Games: iOS: 2009-10-08 2XL MX Offroad: 2012-01-22 2XL Racing: 2014-10-15 2XL Supercross: 2009-04-01 2XL TrophyLite Rally: 2010-06-10 2Xtreme: 989 Studios ...
They developed two MotoGP video games for the SNES: GP-1 (1993) and GP-1 RS: Rapid Stream (1994). Genki found its niche in 1994 with the release of Shutokō Battle '94 Keichii Tsuchiya Drift King for the SNES—the first in a long-running series of racing games. Shutokou Battle 2 followed one year later, in 1995, and was also for the SNES.
In Japan, Famitsu gave the title a score of 32 out of 40. [5] Jeff Chen of NextGen said that the Japanese import of the game was "Not the greatest long-term value, but the new wrinkles make it worth a look." [12] GamePro called Tokyo Xtreme Racer "a racing game that rolled off the assembly line prematurely." [13] [b]
Sonic Drift 2 (ソニックドリフト2, Sonikku Dorifuto Tsū), released in Europe as Sonic Drift Racing, is a kart racing video game by Sega for the Game Gear. The sequel to Sonic Drift , it was released in Japan and Europe in April 1995 and in North America in November 1995.