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Players can engage a stereoscopic 3D mode by pressing the select button while wearing included anaglyph 3D glasses. Rad Racer is a racing game in which the player races in a "Transamerica" race from the West Coast to the East Coast. [3] The gameplay is sprite-based, and the player controls the car from a "behind the vehicle" perspective. [4]
Ridge Racer 3D [b] is a 2011 arcade-style racing video game for the Nintendo 3DS, published and developed by Namco Bandai Games. [2] It was the first Ridge Racer series title on a Nintendo platform since Ridge Racer DS (2004) and as usual for the series revolves around cars racing around high speed tracks while drifting .
Ridge Racer 2, released in Japan as Ridge Racers 2 [b], is a 2006 arcade-style racing game developed by Namco Bandai Games for the PlayStation Portable hand-held console, marking the 14th release in the Ridge Racer series.
Ridge Racer, released in Japan as Ridge Racers [b], is a 2004 arcade-style racing video game developed by Namco for the PlayStation Portable, named after the eponymous Ridge Racer video game series to which it belongs.
Hard Drivin ' is a sim racing arcade video game developed by Atari Games in 1989. [5] Players test drive a sports car on courses that emphasize stunts and speed. It features one of the first 3D polygon driving environments [6] via a simulator cabinet with a haptic vibrating steering wheel and a custom rendering architecture.
Tokyo Xtreme Racer, known as Shutokō Battle (首都高バトル, Shutokō Batoru) in Japan and Tokyo Highway Challenge in Europe, is a 1999 racing video game by Genki, for Sega's Dreamcast console. Released as a launch title in the West, the game was one of the first mission-based racing games; it is based on illegal highway racing in Tokyo 's ...
Cro-Mag Rally is a kart racing game developed by Pangea Software and published by Aspyr, which takes place in caveman times. It was originally released for Mac OS 9 and Mac OS X , and was later ported to iOS , Xbox 360 , Android , and Windows Phone 7 .
Motorific is the brand name of a line of battery-operated slot car toys and related accessories marketed by the Ideal Toy Company from 1964 to the early 1970s. It differed from traditional slot car sets in that the cars were powered independently by a pair of AA batteries, rather than by an electrical connection to the track.