While ultra-realism buffs may
prefer racing games like the Nascar series or Grand Prix Legends, Ive got to admit
that my own racing preferences lean way towards arcade-style racers. And in Ubisofts
Speed Busters, Ive found a game that indulges those preferences with just the sort
of loud, goofy, flashy and crashy gameplay that more or less defines arcade racing.The games premise is pretty absurda policeman wins the lottery
and stages a series of races on various North American highways. Whoever drives the
fastest and clocks highest on the various police radar traps scattered around the tracks
wins. Sure, fine.
You can race in either arcade mode or in championship
modein which youll be able to use your winnings to repair your car or upgrade
it with such items as spoilers, new engines, and tires. You can also buy insurance and
road assistance. In typical console fashion, youll have to unlock tracks and cars as
you go along, though this is fairly easily done by finishing in the top three in
championship mode. Multiplayer is also available, and you can race for free on
Ubisofts severs with their game client software. I raced several times on their
Montreal server (never could find anyone on the San Francisco one) and it worked very
smoothly.
The game includes seven tracks located in California, Mexico, Louisiana,
Colorado, Nevada, and Canadaand a secret "hidden" one as well. The tracks
are truly one of the games strongest points. First of all, they attempt to capture
the various locations ambience not through some sort of photorealistic depiction of
the area, but rather through an almost cartoony postmodern pastiche of regional pop
iconography. So in California, youll race through movie studios replete with the
giant squid from 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea and the shark from Jaws, down the streets of
San Francisco, and across the sands of Venice beach. In Nevada, you race through both Las
Vegas and a neon sign junk lot, across Hoover dam, and through Area 51. And of course
Elvis and a few of his alien buddies make an appearance. Louisiana is full of bayous,
narrow French Quarter streets, and gators. And the tracks are crammed with
shortcuts, hairpin curves, and jumps as well; theres no lack of personality here.
While probably not the Nascar sets cup of tea, this sort of goofy irreverence and
wit works very well in tandem with the games hardcore arcade racing mindset.
Adding to this personality are what Ubisoft calls their "interactive
animations." While in most racing games animations are small and used merely as
window dressing, in this game you can "interact" with them, which mostly means
crash into them. The UFOs you drive under in Nevada will lift your car off the track, the
King Kong animation in California will smash you with his fist, the natives in Mexcio will
throw spears that damage your car. And all of this looks terrific. The game requires a 3D
video card, and all the graphics are beautifully rendered, with weather effects looking
especially nice. All this glitz doesnt seem to come at the expense of slower
gameplay, either; the game ran exceptionally smoothly.
The odd combination of loopiness and beauty found in the tracks
is also evident in the cars, which are a sort of hybrid of several classic models from the
50s to the present. You can also customize them with a collection of paints and
skins, some of which are pretty eccentric. The cars handle fairly realistically; different
road surfaces and conditions affect handling, its very easy to spin out, and as your
car accrues damage (and it will) handling becomes more and more sluggish.
And this is where the one problem I have with the game comes into play.
The cars are pretty touchy for an arcade racer, and it takes a while to get a handle on
the controls. This can be frustrating, especially when youre just beginning and
trying to unlock the second set of tracks. (By the way, the secret to effective driving is
the using the handbrake in turns and leaning on the nitro in the straights. Master these,
you master the game.) But even after you become adept at driving, a certain frustration
level will remain, due mostly to such things as the random wierdnesses that occur on the
tracksmanholes that suddenly shoot into the air, avalanches, alien death rays, you
name itas well as the extreme aggressiveness of your fellow drivers. These guys are
vicious, and will not hesitate to rear-end or ram you, even if its counterproductive
for them. I dont know how many times Ive been racing splendidly, avoiding
rabid moose and other obstacles, only to have some loser bump me off the track and into a
fourth-place place finish. All of these little hazards might not have been so bothersome
if it werent so difficult to recover in this game. If you get pushed off the road,
itll probably take a while to get back on. And in the games most egregious
oversight, theres no reverse gear, so if you get stuck between a tree and a building
it takes a lot of frustrating maneuvering to get back in the race.
But when all is said and done, Speed Busters is still a lot of
fun--a combination of high-speed arcade action and high-spirited goofiness wrapped in a
gorgeous package. If you like arcade racing games and are prepared to suffer through a
little frustration here and there, Id recommend this game highly.
--Rick Fehrenbacher