A couple of hours into WRC Powerslide, there's a moment when you round a hairpin bend, skidding past your competitors in your Ford Fiesta or Skoda Fabia, and you find yourself staring at a gaping Sardinian chasm. Had you been going just a little faster, you realize, you'd have gone careening down to your death amid the sheep and vineyards. It's a good moment, and WRC Powerslide would have done well to include more of them. Unfortunately, much of the game suffers from humdrum racing and forgettable power-ups, and even the sense of achievement in the single-player campaign is weighed down by an unmistakable grind.
Rally racers are something of a rarity these days, and it's clear that the minds behind WRC Powerslide attempted to make the endangered genre more appealing to broader audiences. For one, WRC Powerslide plays more like an arcade game than Dirt with Mini Coopers, and developer Milestone littered each of the 24 levels with six power-ups that do everything from releasing smoke screens to triggering mini hailstorms above your competitors. For another, it largely abandons realistic collision mechanics in favor of physics that have Mitsubishi Lancers bouncing all over the runway. (Though to be fair, you can turn collision off.)
Unfortunately, the game is not as successful as it could have been, and part of the problem may lie in its presentation. For all of its focus on Mario Kart-style power-ups and bouncy physics, WRC Powerslide still at least looks like it's meant to represent the real world, and the resulting mismatch of fantasy and reality jars more than it entices. Power-ups such as speed boosts and smoke screens have some basis in reality, for instance, but you never quite get used to the sight of tiny clouds or lightning bolts popping up over other players' cars during your dusty romps through the deserts of Portugal. The physics, too, ruin the otherwise realistic tumbles as the four cars jostle against each other on steep turns, particularly when another car plows into your own and ends up carrying you all the way to the finish line.
The good news is that the tracks scattered throughout WRC Powerslide's eight regions enjoy an admirable diversity of both visuals and terrain. The highways cutting through the forests of Germany, for instance, encourage speedy races unhindered by few obstacles; the dusty plains of Portugal suit off-road-style racing amid cramped villages and gravelly mountain paths. It's a pity, then, that it's all kind of dull. WRC Powerslide never strays from the simple imperative to outrun the guy in front of you, and the absence of any
shortcuts or ramps for jumping means that you're generally stuck in last place if you get too far behind. Sometimes you can get away with scuttling down the hill at the edge of the sharpest hairpins turns, but in most cases, attempting to leave the road results in a quick respawn that often leaves you staring at your opponents' rear bumpers.
WRC Powerslide features licensed WRC, Class 2, and Class 3 rally cars, but the differences between the three classes seem negligible. They all handle much the same regardless of whether you're racing over snow, mud, or pavement (although, thankfully, they handle well), but particularly after the first level, WRC's roads are so tortuous that you never really get a chance to see how well one car's tiny speed advantage plays out on open stretches. Moreover, the requirements to unlock new regions aren't well explained, and it may take you a while to figure out that you have to look through the next zone's menus to determine what you need to do to unlock it. If you don't, you could easily make the incorrect assumption that you need to complete every race with every car to advance to the next tournament. Even if you figure out the requirements, however, you still have to run every race with every class of car to unlock most cars and crews, and WRC Powerslide's gameplay just doesn't support the replayability demanded by that kind of grind.
Title: WRC Powerslide
Platform: PC
Genre: Arcade / Racing (Cars) / 3D
Language: English, French, Italian, German, Spanish, Brazilian / Portuguese
Developer: Milestone
Publisher: Plug In Digital, Milestone Srl
Size: 774 MB
Release Date: February 7, 2014
Release: RG Reveanauts
System requirements:
Operating System: Windows ® XP ™ SP2, Windows ® Vista ™, Windows ® 7, Windows ® 8
Processor: Intel ™ Core 2 Duo / AMD ™ Athlon 64 X2 or higher
RAM: 3 GB
Video: : NVIDIA ® GeForce ™ 9000 series or higher, AMD ® Radeon ™ HD4000 series or higher (it must be Able to manage Pixel Shader 3.0) with at Least 1GB of display memory
Sound Card: DirectX 9.0c compatible
Free hard ROM: 2GB
This is Torrent Download File, you must be Install uTorrent in your Computer
Rally racers are something of a rarity these days, and it's clear that the minds behind WRC Powerslide attempted to make the endangered genre more appealing to broader audiences. For one, WRC Powerslide plays more like an arcade game than Dirt with Mini Coopers, and developer Milestone littered each of the 24 levels with six power-ups that do everything from releasing smoke screens to triggering mini hailstorms above your competitors. For another, it largely abandons realistic collision mechanics in favor of physics that have Mitsubishi Lancers bouncing all over the runway. (Though to be fair, you can turn collision off.)
Unfortunately, the game is not as successful as it could have been, and part of the problem may lie in its presentation. For all of its focus on Mario Kart-style power-ups and bouncy physics, WRC Powerslide still at least looks like it's meant to represent the real world, and the resulting mismatch of fantasy and reality jars more than it entices. Power-ups such as speed boosts and smoke screens have some basis in reality, for instance, but you never quite get used to the sight of tiny clouds or lightning bolts popping up over other players' cars during your dusty romps through the deserts of Portugal. The physics, too, ruin the otherwise realistic tumbles as the four cars jostle against each other on steep turns, particularly when another car plows into your own and ends up carrying you all the way to the finish line.
The good news is that the tracks scattered throughout WRC Powerslide's eight regions enjoy an admirable diversity of both visuals and terrain. The highways cutting through the forests of Germany, for instance, encourage speedy races unhindered by few obstacles; the dusty plains of Portugal suit off-road-style racing amid cramped villages and gravelly mountain paths. It's a pity, then, that it's all kind of dull. WRC Powerslide never strays from the simple imperative to outrun the guy in front of you, and the absence of any
shortcuts or ramps for jumping means that you're generally stuck in last place if you get too far behind. Sometimes you can get away with scuttling down the hill at the edge of the sharpest hairpins turns, but in most cases, attempting to leave the road results in a quick respawn that often leaves you staring at your opponents' rear bumpers.
WRC Powerslide features licensed WRC, Class 2, and Class 3 rally cars, but the differences between the three classes seem negligible. They all handle much the same regardless of whether you're racing over snow, mud, or pavement (although, thankfully, they handle well), but particularly after the first level, WRC's roads are so tortuous that you never really get a chance to see how well one car's tiny speed advantage plays out on open stretches. Moreover, the requirements to unlock new regions aren't well explained, and it may take you a while to figure out that you have to look through the next zone's menus to determine what you need to do to unlock it. If you don't, you could easily make the incorrect assumption that you need to complete every race with every car to advance to the next tournament. Even if you figure out the requirements, however, you still have to run every race with every class of car to unlock most cars and crews, and WRC Powerslide's gameplay just doesn't support the replayability demanded by that kind of grind.
Title: WRC Powerslide
Platform: PC
Genre: Arcade / Racing (Cars) / 3D
Language: English, French, Italian, German, Spanish, Brazilian / Portuguese
Developer: Milestone
Publisher: Plug In Digital, Milestone Srl
Size: 774 MB
Release Date: February 7, 2014
Release: RG Reveanauts
System requirements:
Operating System: Windows ® XP ™ SP2, Windows ® Vista ™, Windows ® 7, Windows ® 8
Processor: Intel ™ Core 2 Duo / AMD ™ Athlon 64 X2 or higher
RAM: 3 GB
Video: : NVIDIA ® GeForce ™ 9000 series or higher, AMD ® Radeon ™ HD4000 series or higher (it must be Able to manage Pixel Shader 3.0) with at Least 1GB of display memory
Sound Card: DirectX 9.0c compatible
Free hard ROM: 2GB
This is Torrent Download File, you must be Install