A novel feature
of the game is a pressure meter on the other races that
increases the longer you sit on their tail. Hang around
the back bumper long enough to fill the pressure meter
and the poor fellows will lose their nerve and spin off
the track, letting you pass. Inpractice if you get close
enough to the other drivers you can usually pass them before
filling the meter.
By default the game is set up with a braking assist featureswitched on which
lets even the most uncoordinated of drivers make good progress around the tracks
and through the game, I tested it on a six year old an found that he could
quite happily progress through the first few rounds. Switch this off and set
the difficulty to hard and more advanced drivers will find that it puts up
slightly more of a challenge but not much more, this is the kind of game that
is possible to finish in a misspent weekend.
For this reason I can’t
be too hard on this game, forget about the comparisons to other races and you
are left with a game that offers that short term thrill of an easy complete,
if you have the expendable income to play a title in one shot for laughs then
R Racing is acceptable you can always part exchange it afterwards for something
more taxing.
R Racing fails to distinguish itself and with so many other options out there
it is easy to pass it over. Its one saving grace may be its ease which may
be incentive enough for those not that bothered by realism but equally bored
with toy racing games to give it a weekends worth of notice.
6/10 |