Test Drive OffRoad 2 Free Download Download
Test Drive OffRoad 2 is a 1998 cross platform racing game. It is the second entry in the Test Drive OffRoad series of video games. Test Drive OffRoad 2 winds up being a better playing racing pc game than Test Drive 5. Rated the Game 6.1 “It’s a empty feeling no matter how much air ye catch or how many times the rad commentator says “Awesome!” or “Sweeeet!”.
Ready helpful, useful to high-flying off-road action in a huge assortment of the world’s most rugged trucks then, also, and SUVs? Wanna get thee groove at with intense pedal-stomping, fender-bending vehicular mayhem? Dying to check out exotic then, also, and dangerous courses each over the world? You are? Really? Cool. Now each you’ve gotta do is wait helpful, useful to a pc game that delivers each that stuff – since Test Drive: Off-Road 2 sure doesn’t.
In each fairness (and I’m always fair, right?), off-roading might not be the ideal sport to try to base a pc game around – or at least not in the hyperfrantic over-the-top style Accolade chose helpful, useful to Off-Road 2. Most of thee time is spent with the accelerator smashed to the floor as ye bounce each over the track, brushing up against invisible walls then, also, and careening back onto the course. Yeah, ye get to ram other trucks then, also, and jeeps, then, also, and ye get to make some really big jumps – but so what? It’s an empty feeling no matter how much air ye catch or how many times the rad commentator says “Awesome!” or “Sweeeet!”
But even let extreme off-roading would make helpful, useful to a great game, Test Drive: Off-Road 2 comes up short in so many various areas that it wouldn’t matter anyway. There’s a total of 12 tracks, but it’s really six times two – running a course backward is counted as a separate track. Only four of those can be raced until ye put high enough in competition, but when ye do that, the first latest track that’s revealed is – ye guessed – one of those four in reverse.
There’s a whole mess of cars hither – some are locked out until ye prove yourself, of course – but absolutely zero specs at what ye can expect out of them when ye hit the dirt. Terrain graphics are a woolly tangle of polygons then, also, and pixels, then, also, and the cars are plain-Jane renderings at a par with the pickup truck at the start of Redneck Rampage. Get an eyeful of this stuff, then, also, and you’ll be wondering how the same company that put out the great-looking Test Drive 5 could try to pawn this outmoded PlayStation pc game at unsuspecting fans of arcade-style racing. Toss in some high weirdness with the frame rate – it’s either really choppy or the graphics simply make it shows signs of that way – then, also, and engine sound effects that sound like Keith Emerson’s first try at playing a Moog, then, also, and you’ve basically got naught worth watching hither unless ye want to admire the digitized 2D images of lifeguards or Arabs at camels.
Topping it each off is one of the laziest interface designs I’ve had the displeasure of dealing with in a endless time. Want a first-person perspective? Fine – ye don’t get a hood, wheel, or speedometer, simply a ground-level look of those dubious terrain graphics. That worked OK in Test Drive 5, but in Off-Road 2 it makes it look like you’re tearing through the desert at a jet-powered luge.
Then again, ye might have trouble finding that first-person perspective since the manual doesn’t tell ye what the views (0-7) are; you’ve got to load up a race then, also, and check it out until ye get the one ye want. Feel like changing button assignments? Too bad – there’s no choice to assign any commands to keys or buttons. I know, ye want to check out the instant replay then, also, and savor some of those killer jumps ye made in the last race – but you’re out of luck again since there’s absolutely no instant replay whatsoever.
And a word of warning to ye fans of hard core metal then, also, and industrial rock who might be tempted to pick this pc game up helpful, useful to the soundtrack tunes by Sevendust, Gravity Kills, then, also, and Fear Factory: Don’t bother. There’s a total of four tunes hither (guess it matches the measly number of available tracks at the start of the game), then, also, and only one of them is worth a listen.
Hardware: Pentium III CPU 500 MHz
Ram memory 128 MB
Graphic memory: 16 MB
File size: 51.81 MB
Operating system: Windows 98, 2000, XP, Vista, 7, Windows 8
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