Software:Big Red Racing

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Big Red Racing
Big Red Racing PC title.png
Title screen
Developer(s)Big Red Software
Publisher(s)Domark
Platform(s)MS-DOS
Release
Genre(s)Racing
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Big Red Racing is a racing video game released for MS-DOS in 1995. It was developed by Big Red Software and published by Domark.[3] Versions were planned for Nintendo 64, PlayStation, Saturn, 3DO, and Jaguar but were not released.[citation needed][clarification needed]

Gameplay

Big Red Racing is a comedic racing game. During races, the commentators make humorous comments, stereotypically themed to the country they are from. When menu items are clicked, humorous phrases are played.

U.S.A. "Excellent Adventure" track

There are 24 courses and 6 cups, encompassing the globe, the Moon, Venus, and Mars. Each course has a humorous subtitle, usually a parody of a famous phrase or film.

Customisation

For the driver, the player can choose from a few different body shapes and change the colour of the clothes. For the vehicle, the player can change the colour and decal.

Development

The later Eurogamer writer Keith Stuart was commissioned to write an expansive backstory for the game, which was to be included in the printed manual. Few months before release the publisher balked at the cost and cut the manual. Looking back in 2016, Stuart wrote: "They were right. It didn't really add anything, it was indulgent (...) No one will ever care that I spent several weeks writing that nonsense or that now it is gone forever".[4]

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
GameSpot7.5/10[5]
Next Generation3/5 stars[6]
Computer Game Review89/100[7]

GameSpot was positive to the game; although commenting that the title is not a simulation, but an arcade game, they recommended it for arcade fans.[5] A Next Generation critic highly praised the variety of playable vehicles and tracks and the use of real time graphics. He remarked that while the low graphical detail makes the game look chunky, it also enables the game to run just as smoothly with six players as with only one. However, he criticized the single-player mode for the AI's apparent cheating, since there is always one racer just slightly ahead of the player car, and recommended that consumers not buy the game until they've made certain they have someone who will play it with them.[6] Frank Snyder of Computer Game Review offered Big Red Racing a positive score.[7]

References

  1. "Online Gaming Review". 1997-02-27. http://www.ogr.com/news/news0396.html. 
  2. "Race fun". Burton Mail: pp. 6. August 26, 1995. https://www.newspapers.com/image/823434633. "Big Red Racing, the new game from Domark Software, aims to put the fun back into computer racing games...you'll have to wait until November to put the game through its paces." 
  3. IGN.com: Big Red Racing
  4. Stuart, Keith (23 April 2016). "Why is video game lore so awful?". Eurogamer.net. http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2016-04-23-against-the-lore. Retrieved 1 May 2016. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 Poole, Stephen (June 27, 1996). "Big Red Racing Review". http://www.gamespot.com/reviews/big-red-racing-review/1900-2538231/. Retrieved 21 July 2017. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 "Big Red Racing". Next Generation (Imagine Media) (19): 83–84. July 1996. https://archive.org/details/Next-Generation-1996-07/page/n83/mode/2up. 
  7. 7.0 7.1 Snyder, Frank (July 1996). "Big Red Racing". Computer Game Review. http://www.nuke.com/cgr/reviews/9607/bigred/bigred.htm.