World Driver Championship

World Driver Championship

North American Nintendo 64 cover art
Developer(s) Boss Game Studios
Publisher(s) Midway
Composer(s) Zack Ohren
Platform(s) Nintendo 64
Release date(s)
  • NA May 31, 1999
  • EU November 1999
Genre(s) Racing game
Mode(s) Single player, multiplayer
Distribution Cartridge

World Driver Championship is an automobile racing video game. It was developed by Boss Game Studios and published for the Nintendo 64 by Midway Games. Released late in the console's lifespan, it is notable for having especially high quality graphics.

Production

One of the last racing simulations to be released for Nintendo 64, this graphically intensive title uses custom microcode optimization and high polygon count modelling. The development team was able to optimize the usage of the various processors within the N64 to allow a great draw distance (reducing the need for fog or pop-up), highly detailed texturing and models, Doppler effect MP3 audio, and advanced lighting and fog effects for realistic weather conditions. Increasingly prevalent toward the latter years of the N64's commercial lifetime, the game has a high resolution 640x480 mode that does not require the add-on N64 RAM Expansion Pak. Additionally, unlike many other games of its type on the platform, the game runs high resolution at a smooth pace.

Boss Game Studio planned to release an updated port of the game on the Nintendo GameCube, but never published it.[1]

The soundtrack, consisting of original rock and heavy metal tunes, was composed by musician Zack Ohren.

Gameplay

Tracks

There are ten locations in the entire game, most of each with six tracks (marked "A", "B", and "C"), three of which are in reverse (marked "R" next to "A", "B", and "C"). The exception is Black Forest, which has only four tracks, two of them being in reverse.

These are the ten locations: Hawaii; Les Gets (a mountain village located in Southeastern France); Las Vegas, USA; Auckland, New Zealand; Lisbon, Portugal; Rome, Italy; Sydney, Australia; Zurich, Switzerland; Kyoto, Japan; and Black Forest of Germany.

Cars and teams

GT2 Class

Team Car Based
United States Speedcraft Ellipse Stallion Saleen Ford Mustang S281
Mexico Kohr Racing Rage 512 Evo Porsche 911 (993) GT2
Italy Viewpoint Elan Swift TT Lotus Esprit GT1
Australia Reeds Racing Reeds R12 Manta Callaway Corvette LM GT2
France Eurospec Ram Venom GTR Dodge Viper GTS-R
Brazil Totalsport Furio LS Marcos LM600
United Kingdom Elite EXR Challenger TVR Cerbera GT2

GT1 Class

Team Car Based
Japan Team Nebo Hayai N70 Nissan R390 GT1
Republic of Ireland Victorysmith Lance Scorcher Lister Storm GT1
Italy Sage Autosport Elan Scorpion Lotus Elise GT1
United Kingdom Lassiter McCloud F-Type McLaren F1 GTR (long tail)
Canada SSD Competition Panzer Batraye GT Panoz GTR-1 Esperante
United States Boss Racing Rage 996 GTR Porsche 911 (996) GT1
Germany Meiden-Krauss M-K Phantom R Mercedes-Benz CLK-LM
Excalibur LTD EXR Mystic TVR Speed 12

Reception

Reviews
Publication Score
Gamespot
5.7/10
IGN
8.8/10
EGM
7.25/10
Nintendo Power
8.7/10
Compilations of multiple reviews
Game Rankings
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78 out of 100[2]

The game received mixed and positive reviews due to intense competition at the time. While the game was an improvement in nearly every way compared to Boss's similar earlier effort, Top Gear Rally, it was up against the impressive new Gran Turismo series and other new racers. Complaints included a somewhat unconvincing driving physics model, non-licensed cars, and poor sound effects and music quality. The dislike for the physics model often stems from the beginning cars being difficult to drive and offering a "sloppy" feeling of control.

Sweepstakes

The sweepstakes was to start on June 15th, 1999 and end on August 15th, 1999. Winners could receive T- Shirts, Midway games or the grand prize of $2,500. It is unknown who won the $2,500.

References

  1. IGN Staff (June 17, 2002). "Boss Game Calls it Quits". IGN. Retrieved March 3, 2012.
  2. "World Driver Championship Reviews". Game Rankings.

External links