The Fast and the Furious (video game)

The Fast and the Furious

Developer(s) Eutechnyx
Publisher(s) Bandai Namco Games
Distributor(s) Universal Interactive
Bandai Namco Games
Platform(s) PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable
Release date(s) PlayStation 2
  • NA September 26, 2006
  • EU March 9, 2007
PlayStation Portable
  • NA April 24, 2007
  • EU October 26, 2007 (as Tokyo Drift)
Genre(s) Racing
Mode(s) Single-player, Multiplayer
Rating(s)
Media/distribution DVD, UMD

The Fast and The Furious (ファスト・アンド・フュリアス?) is a racing game for the PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable. The game is based on the film series of the same name; particularly, The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift. It should not be confused with The Fast and the Furious arcade game, which was later ported to the Nintendo Wii as Cruis'n (due to the publisher losing the license rights).

Contents

Gameplay

This game features many different races that may take place on the Wangan, or on the local mountain roads called Touge. There are two types of races that can take place on the Wangan: Destination Races - a simple point to point race, and Top Speed Battles - whoever can set the highest speed record in between the start and finish wins. The Touge also features two events: Grip Battles - point to point race going uphill or downhill through tight Hairpin Turns, and Drift Battles - whoever can accumulate the most points by the end of the run wins. Throughout the Wangan are several exits which can lead to hotspots - where Wangan races can be started, touges, Car Dealerships, tune shops, and Robo-Garages. These garages were featured in the movie The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift. There are 8 different dealerships where vehicles can be purchased: Nissan dealership, Mitsubishi dealership, Mazda dealership, Honda dealership, Toyota dealership, Subaru dealership, Lexus dealership, and a U.S. Naval Base - where according to the instruction booklet included with the game, cars are brought over by stationed soldiers who end up selling them or are just imported. The tune shops are spread over the map and offer performance upgrades, visual upgrades, and paint jobs which are free and fully customizable by the player.

Cars

The game includes many Japanese cars such as the Mazda RX-7, Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution, Subaru Impreza WRX STI, Toyota Supra, Honda NSX and the Nissan Skyline. There are also some American cars such as the Chevrolet Corvette Z06 and the Shelby GT500.

Development

In 2003, an anticipated game with the same name was developed[1] and then cancelled [2]. The two games were released by two different developers however, (the cancelled game by Genki[3]; the released game by Eutechnyx), and were not related in any way.

Reviews

The game was not received particularly well. IGN gave it a 6.6 out of 10 (passable), saying the game did "a number of things mostly right, but only a few things very well"[4]

Trivia

At the first touge, Doushi, there is a reminescence of Initial D, with a driver in a yellow Mazda RX-7 FD named Reisuke and another in a white Mazda RX-7 FC named Kyosuke. Also, there is a vinyl apparently being the Fujiwara Tofu shop sticker, but it's just an AutoExe vinyl written in Japanese.

References

  1. ^ E3 2003: Fast and Furious Hands-on retrieved August 17 2010
  2. ^ The Fast and the Furious [Canceled] retrieved August 17 2010
  3. ^ E3 2003: Fast and Furious Hands-on retrieved August 17 2010
  4. ^ The Fast and the Furious Review Retrieved 16 August 2010

External links