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Midway Arcade
Treasures 3

The third entry in Midway's Arcade Treasures series brings several of the
company's popular racing titles directly from the arcade to your living
room. Put the pedal to the metal as you race against friends or time in
these eight classic driving games.
(Midway, 2005, for Playstation 2, Xbox & Gamecube)

Midway Arcade Treasures 3, the first themed disc in Midway's
series of compilations, delivers eight different racing games that offer
something for everyone. However, due to the fact that the titles vary so
much in style and age, it's doubtful anyone will care for all of them.
Fans of the older games on the compilation will get headaches from the
flashy newer titles, while the current generation of games will scoff at
what used to pass for racing entertainment.
The current generation of racers are represented by four titles:
Off Road Thunder, San Francisco Rush: The Rock, Rush 2049 and
Hydro Thunder, the last two of which appeared as stand-alone
Dreamcast titles. Those with a need for speed will surely find what they
are looking for in one of these four games. What is there to say about
current racing games that hasn't been said? Race laps around tracks in
the car (SF Rush), rocket car (Rush 2049), boat (Hydro
Thunder) or truck (Off Road Thunder) of your choice. Off
Road Thunder is the worst looking of the four with muddy textures
and sloppy handling; the other three look visually stunning and play as
expected. Most of the newer games allow multiplayer split-screen racing
action.
The 2-D era is represented by two-and-a-half top-down racers, Super
Off-Road, Super Off-Road Expansion Pack (same game, additional tracks)
and Badlands. Both games are presented in a slight isometric view,
similar to Atari's Championship Sprint. Surprisingly enough, modern
analog sticks serve as decent steering wheel replacements in these games.
The control system using the triggers for gas/break and the analog stick
for steering gives you good control, a must in any racing game. Super
Off-Road has always been one of my favorite SNES titles, so it's nice
to finally own a home version of the real game. Bandlands plays
like a futuristic version of Championship Sprint where your cars
have been outfitted with weapons. Fans of Championship Sprint will
recognize many of the game's sound effects which also appear here. These
games also allow for multiplayer action, as all the action takes place on
one screen.
The "wow, these used to pass for racing games" department is
represented by Race Drivin' and S.T.U.N. Runner, two games
that waded into the world of 3-D graphics by using few polygons and even
less textures. As a kid growing up, the thing I remember about both of
these games is that (at least in my arcade) they both had really large,
unique environmental cabinets. The Race Drivin' cabinet resembled
a big yellow driving simulator that you got in, adjusted the seat, and
even had to push down on the clutch and turn a physical key to start!
S.T.U.N. Runner's cabinet looked like a huge futuristic motorcycle
bench you sat on to play. In context and during that era, they are
interesting games that show where the industry was headed, but most
gamers checking them out will be doing so out of curiosity's sake and not
for any great length of time. Race Drivin', the sequel to Hard
Drivin', is probably the most cumbersome title on the disc. Both of
these games are one player only.
Despite the fact that all eight of the disc's games were originally
played with controllers other than standard joysticks, all three modern
consoles' analog sticks allow the games to be playable. Joystick control
for games designed for steering wheels is never perfect, but here it's
adaquate.
Missing this time around are the extras, those little bits that make
these compilations more than just collections of games. No configurable
controllers, no trivia, no interviews, no unlockable goals, no nothing.
Even the menu is stark, filled with a single generically rendered arcade
game. The "extras" link from the main menu allows gamers to choose
between watching an Ed, Edd and Eddy commercial and the game's credits.
Fortunately, suicide isn't offered as a third option (it would be a tough
decision).
Midway Arcade Treasures 3 is a good but not great collection.
Midway has taken a step backwards here by offering fewer games and extras
than on their previous Treasures discs, but ultimately the games
themselves play perfectly and deliver as advertised.
Rating:
Three quarters - a lack of variety and not enough titles keep
Midway Arcade Treasures 3 from ranking higher. "Treasure" may be
pushing the status of some of the games on this disc. True fans of
racing games will get the most mileage out of this collection.
Reviewed by Rob O'Hara
theLogBook.com Staff Writer



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