Need 4 Speed Most Wanted Review 2005 Vs 2012

Our Verdict

A smoother, more seamless ride than Hot Pursuit, its second time lucky for this fast, furious open-globe motor show.

PC Gamer Verdict

A smoother, more seamless ride than Hot Pursuit, its second time lucky for this fast, furious open up-world motor show.

Review by Dave Valjalo

You lot're cruising the downtown streets in a shiny new Lamorghini when – gasp – y'all spot an as gorgeous Maserati tucked away down a side-street. What practise you accept to do to possess that succulent new motor? What challenges do you lot have to beat, races do yous take to win, pockets do y'all take to pick? None, actually. Only pull up alongside it and it's yours for the taking.

Almost Wanted's sprawlingly open up world, Fairhaven, is a free-for-all. Every location, every nook and cranny – and all 123 vehicles – are attainable from the off, y'all but accept to explore and notice. If that sounds as well piece of cake, the real challenge, every bit in Hot Pursuit, Criterion's previous entry in the Need for Speed canon, is chirapsia your friends' records to creep up that leaderboard and gloat similar the obnoxious owner of a German language sportscar that costs more than near peoples' houses.

Well-nigh everything you lot do in Fairhaven is cantankerous-compared with your friends and other players, from highest jumps to how fast you fly by speed cameras. Information technology's all updated in the blink-of-an-centre via Autolog 2.0, the second iteration of Criterion's social network designed to bring out your dark, competitive side.

Sadly, one of Hot Pursuit's strengths and cadre attractions, the option to play as the law and dispense justice fashionably in a blue and white Gallardo, has been scrapped for Most Wanted. This is a game that harks directly back to the series' roots (and the 1998 game of the aforementioned name) where it'due south all about looking expert as you escape and frustrate the fuzz. Chases tin can pause out at any time as yous become nigh your unsafe driving, and you lot're rewarded with points for the lengthiest and deadliest of your escape runs. In that location are no EMPs to use or tyre-spikes to throw downwards – no weapons at all, in fact – merely you can upgrade your ride with everything from nitrous shots to re-inflatable tyres past mastering the automobile-specific events dotted all over the vast, varied map.

Chases rise in tension and assailment until you either resort to a change of identity (by breezing through any street-side garage for an instant lick of new pigment) or you observe yourself surrounded and eventually busted by the police force (a regular problem when they roll out the big, bad SWAT-style units), costing you lot your hard-earned Speed Points. Speed Points are Near Wanted's equivalent of XP: your means to rank upwards your profile and earn a shot at i of the game's 'most wanted' slots, which are occupied either by your friends or predetermined AI rivals. It may take a drive-anything, go-anywhere ethos, but there's a game here, a ladder to climb and a reputation to build, through cutthroat driving and bumper-crumpling bravado.

With its heaving roster of cars and toned-downwardly upgrades, Need for Speed: Almost Wanted is more than for the car fetishist than the car-chase fanatic, and the developers' attention to the experience of each vehicle shines through – although the lack of cockpit artwork remains a bugbear. Handling is a halfway house betwixt the simulation of a game like Shift (which, as if to rub information technology in, has lovely, authentic cockpits) and the arcade activity of Hot Pursuit.

With a option of cars for all tastes, a map filled with sun-soaked sights and roaring sounds, and a gamut of challenges, this is the virtually content-rich Need for Speed released in some fourth dimension. It's also the most social, and takes the serial right back to its core attraction: the thrill of driving very, very fast in very, very expensive cars.

Wait to pay: £30

Release: Out at present

Programmer: Criterion Games

Publisher: EA

Multiplayer: Up to 12

Link: www.needforspeed.com/most-wanted

Need for Speed: Most Wanted

A smoother, more than seamless ride than Hot Pursuit, its second time lucky for this fast, furious open-earth motor show.

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Source: https://www.pcgamer.com/need-for-speed-most-wanted-review/

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