11 Old Racing Game Features You Miss Most
1. Used car garage
Here’s what sparked this community question. In the older Gran Turismo games there was a used car dealership - it was fun to keep checking it and it added a bit of variety. It’s a real shame it hasn’t featured in more recent installments.
Split screen was such a simple but enjoyable way of competing with your friends, but a lot of new racing games are focusing on online multiplayer, rather than off-line split screen features. It’s a big shame and limits the kind of multiplayer racing you can do.
3. Free roaming
The example here is Project Gotham Racing 2, Daniel says: “The ability to walk freely around the autoshow in PGR 2. I probably spent more time walking around here than actually racing.”
Current games usually look for sleek car menus and smart graphics, compared to small but enjoyable features like this.
This was a feature in Need For Speed Underground 2, adding to the whole performance customisation feature on offer in the game – so you could change tuning setups and get performance statistics.
5. Having to work for it
This is a pretty broad one but it’s so true. Older games definitely featured more unlockable content, so top cars and supercars were out of bounds until you achieved certain things or got to a specific level.
That’s not really the case in most modern games; you’re given free choice of even the most powerful and exotic cars available. It takes a little away from the story of the game and the sense of achievement.
6. Building your own team
There’s always something really cool about a game giving you the chance to build your own race team up, like in the original Race Driver: Grid game from Codemasters. This kind of involvement and customisation is rare in modern games and adds a whole new level of immersion and personalisation to the experience.
7. Simple Mario Kart circuits
It’s fun to see the Mario Kart map creators going all out with wacky stuff but sometimes the best tracks are the simple ones. We’re talking about the sort of circuit where there’s no going upside down or underwater - it’s just a track and maybe a few obstacles to keep things interesting.
8. Trim changes
As Musclecarlover7 said in reply to this suggestion, being able to customise more things on a car like the trim and interior colours adds a real sense of ownership to racing games. Test Drive Unlimited 2 is the example used for this one, adding a whole new bit of customisation to the cars – the inside is important too, not just the outside of the cars.
9. Appropriate pricing
This is a bug bear of mine and, it seems, quite a few people too. When I saw this comment I immediately thought “hell yes”. More modern games make prices for even basic cars way too expensive.
10. Sending cars to friends
While this feature was probably not immensely popular or regularly used by many gamers, it was a nice extra to have. Being able to send cars across to friends (which I used to do in Forza Motorsport 4) was a way of sharing the gaming experience, in some cases helping each other and adding a sense of community to the games.
In Forza 4 gamers could actually play their own version of the epic Top Gear Car Football (or soccer, however you say it where you’re from). It was a fun little feature and was something different to the usual racing too.
You can see all of the suggestions on the community question post here.
Comments
Anybody remembers nfs hot pursuit 2, when you hit a road sign and find it still spinning the next lap?
Miss? I only play forza 4 ;)
I miss the user car market from forza 4 :(
Well you can change the interior colour of your car in the crew
Worst thing is, most of these are gone just to allow the developers to make more money.
Need for Speed Porsche Unleashed. Buying used cars, parting them out, and making a profit. Just like in real life.
YOU COULD DO THAT?
All of my friends and I use to play these little side games for hours. Tag, Cat and Mouse and soccer were our favorite. We still get to play Tag but miss playing the others.
I remember when Track builders were the most greatest things in the world! Why don’t we have more racing games with ‘em? The only modern games I know that have it are trackmania and that one update for gran turismo 6.
Seeing how much Most Wanted is cherished,this is most likely an unpopular opinion,but I loved not having to deal wit police in NFSU2.
You could just do skids,go for top speed runs,racing AI cars (and obviously spin them around to then blast away with Nos) without having to worry about starting a chase you weren’t sure when or if you’d get away from.
Add that after the chase you’re most likely to have forgotten what you got out for or won’t do it anyway because you’d start another chase.