Battle Cars | |
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Cover art |
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Developer(s) | Malibu Interactive[1] |
Publisher(s) | Namco[1] |
Platform(s) | Super NES[1] |
Release date(s) | |
Genre(s) | Racing |
Mode(s) | Single-player Multiplayer |
Media/distribution | Cartridge |
Battle Cars is a racing video game for the Super NES that was developed by Malibu and published by Namco in 1993. It is a futuristic racing game in which cars are equipped with missiles, grenade launchers, and sliding disks which are used to eliminate opponents.
The game can be played by either one or two players. In a one-player game, the player progresses through a series of progressively harder levels. Two players can alternate as each progresses through the levels of the one-player game, or they may go head-to-head in a number of race tracks.
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The excess of the Industrial Revolution was doomed to haunt the earth. As the 20th century faded into the 21st, the planet's largest economies were focused on the service industry. Overpopulation and few environmental quality regulations created an exodus of traditional industry to less developed nations. Fueled with cheap labor, factories churned out consumer products with obsolete "dirty" machines purchased from the former industrial giants. Each year billions of metric tons of pollution were dumped into the biosphere. Global warming increased exponentially.
As the 21st century progresses the greenhouse effect began to take its ugly toll. The polar ice caps melted at an ever increasing rate.[2] International tensions rose with the water level at a time when the world had never been better armed. The end of the Cold War over a hundred years earlier saw huge arsenals of weapons capable of mass destruction. As coastal cities sank under the oceans, people demanded action. Politically the easiest solution was to point fingers and launch attacks against "environmental terrorists.[2]" Between global warming and global warfare the earth was forever changed.[2]
The start of the 22nd century saw a true new world order. Survivors of the devastation lived in city-states. Technology sophisticated and jaded by years of war the people demanded a new sport for their new age....Battle Cars...technology...aggression...Battle Cars. Afforded the same popularity earlier cultures had given artists or pop musicians, Battle Car drivers are heroes. Their only rule is to win.
Citation: Battle Cars instruction manual, page 4
The player can select from three vehicles at the start of the game in a variety of colors. Each vehicle handles the same, so the choice is a matter of personal preference. The player uses his chosen vehicle for the length of the game. The choices are a spiked vehicle, a hot rod, and a formula one-style race car.
The vehicles driven by the level bosses are more exotic and unavailable to play.
The player can upgrade his vehicle by spending cash earned by defeating enemies on cross-country circuits. Each category may be upgraded to level eight.
The game features three weapons. These can be upgraded up to five levels, each increasing in speed and accuracy. Weapon upgrades are purchased using credits obtained from quickly completing Cross-Country races.
The main game features nine levels, each with two race tracks; one cross-country and one circuit.
Cross-Country: The player must first complete a Cross-Country track. These are linear courses in which the player must make it to the end of the course while destroying enemy cars to score cash. A countdown timer will be periodically displayed and if the player spends too much time on a cross-country track, he will be attacked repeatedly by the Peace-Net satellites scattered about the track.
Circuit: Upon successfully completing the level's Cross-Country race, the player is challenged by the level's boss racer to a circuit race. The race is for two laps, and while there are many enemy cars present, they are merely a foil to the human player as destroying them does not provide any cash rewards. To increase the challenge, the boss's vehicle cannot be destroyed, but can be slowed down with attacks.
The names of the levels and bosses are:
In addition, there are five circuit tracks and nine cross-country tracks in two-player mode.