I’m confused by the likes of long jump, however, which has a net at the end of the landing zone and thus a maximum distance that can be regularly reached and never beaten. I also really like the golf minigame (scoring a hole-in-one is truly satisfying, and so is nailing your driver’s landing and subsequent slide to reach the furthest greens). I particularly dig ‘Finnish Pins’, which demands both skill and strategy to achieve the correct score of exactly 25. These ragdoll physics games are dating a bit but they’re still good fun here, and the stadium is filled with 12 ridiculous, driver-tossing minigames like curling, beer pong, billiards, and more. It’s not a game that I’d demand you to rush out and buy, but if you like racers and fancy something a bit different, you’ll not likely be disappointed.“It’s definitely the stunt arena where FlatOut 4 sticks closest to the series’ earlier spirit. The visuals, whilst sub-par at first glance are not a distraction at all once you have you pedal to the metal. The demolition derby-style gameplay is a little more tongue-in-cheek than your usual racer. The races are heart-in-mouth affairs and really give you the feeling of speed. Multiplayer duties are handled via traditional online matchmaking, or the eight-player Party mode, whereby player take turns in stunt events.įlatOut 4: Total Insanity is a bit rough around the edges, but it’s a lot more fun to play than it deserves to be. You can pick the mode, type and track, as well as modifiers for nitro and damage, race length and even lighting. Once you unlock them, Quickplay allows you to go straight into your favourite custom solo event. Like the game needs another way to destroy cars. Finally, Assault mode adds weapons into the mix. This makes it a breakneck experience, guaranteed to end in tears. Beat the bomb is a race again a countdown, trying to travel as far as you can before the bomb goes off.Ĭarnage races are checkpoint affairs whereby your nitro is constantly filling. Basically, it is a demolition derby arena, the aim of which is to destroy as many cars as you can within a certain time limit. The deathmatch mode was much more my cup of tea. Nowhere near as fun as the old crash mode of the Burnout games. Stunt events have you trying to propel your ragdoll driver into a physics-enabled environment in order to complete challenges. Unfortunately, if you get ahead of the pack, there goes your crazy speed boost- with no cars to hit, you can’t charge your nitro.įlatout Mode allows you to pick your event from those featured in the career mode, plus the stunt event. As you race, smashing into your opponent’s charges your nitro, propelling you at breakneck speed. The circuits themselves are a bit hit and miss, some very good, but quite a few are very similar-looking industrial settings. The Career mode has you picking a car and proceeding through a series of championships, upgrading and exchanging your car as you progress. The question was, with all that motion blur, would I notice the lack of anti-aliasing during the races?įlatOut 4: Total Insanity (or, as the publishers would have me write it, Fl4tout Total Insanity– the last time I’m typing that), is all about zany fast races featuring a range of beaten-up cars ploughing into one another. The first thing to slap me around the face after firing the game up on the Xbox One was the state of the visuals. This has left development duties with Kylotonn, who did a decent job on WRC 6, but shit the bed a little bit with WRC 5. I know that the original developer, Bugbear is now off doing their own thing with the fun and very similar, but long in gestation, Wreakfest. Whilst I’d played, and enjoyed one of its predecessors, I wasn’t sure what to make of this effort. Whilst not the quite as perfectly honed a specimen as the likes of say Forza Horizons 3, FlatOut 4 is still a very entertaining racer, and pretty exhilarating with it. Bigben’s FlatOut 4: Total Insanity had exactly the same effect on me. One of the first racing games that had me holding my breath the entire lap was Bizarre Creations’ Destruction Derby 2 on the original PlayStation.
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