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Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing

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GameSpot

Designer(s)
  
Artem Mironovsky

Initial release date
  
20 November 2003

Genre
  
Racing video game

Platform
  
Microsoft Windows


Producer(s)
  
Sergey Titov

Release date(s)
  
NA: November 20, 2003

Developer
  
Stellar Stone

Mode
  
Single-player video game


Programmer(s)
  
Denis Julitov Sergey Titov

Artist(s)
  
Yaroslav Kulov Svetlana Slavinskaya Peter Jameson Tim Maletsky

Publishers
  
GameMill Publishing, Activision, Activision Publishing Minneapolis, Inc, Game Mill Entertainment

Similar
  
American Truck Simulator, Ride to Hell: Retribution, Hong Kong 97, Infestation: Survivor Stories, Penn & Teller's Smoke a

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Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing is a racing video game developed by Stellar Stone and published by GameMill Publishing, released for Microsoft Windows on November 20, 2003.

Contents

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The packaging of Big Rigs states that the main objective of the game is to race a semi-trailer truck (known colloquially as a "big rig") in order to safely deliver illegal cargo being carried by the vehicle, while avoiding the local police force. In the game itself, no objectives beyond reaching the finish line are presented, no load is attached to the trucks, and no police are present. Much of the game instead centers on the player racing their truck against fellow drivers to the finish line; however, in the earlier versions the player's computer-controlled opponent vehicles have no AI and never move from the starting position. In a later version, the computer-controlled opponent will race around the track, but will stop just before crossing the finish line. The timer in the game is merely aesthetic and has no limit on the gameplay. In addition, due to a lack of collision detection, there are no obstacles to navigate within the game, and the player is able to phase through environments and leave the game altogether.

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing was critically panned. The game's criticism was largely directed at its "blatantly unfinished" state: lack of collision detection and frequent violation of the laws of physics, frequent and major software bugs, poor visuals, and severe lack of functionality. As a result, the game is now widely regarded as one of the worst video games of all time.

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Gamespot big rigs over the road racing video review pc


Gameplay

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing is notorious for being released in a pre-alpha state.

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing Big Rigs Over the Road Racing Gameplay and Commentary YouTube

The game's packaging states that the goal is to race a semi-trailer truck and deliver illegal cargo carried by the vehicle to the finish line before the competition while being chased by the police. It also states that there are "1000s of miles of highways and byways across America" and 4 different routes. This is extremely misleading as there are no loads attached to the trucks, no police present, and the actual objective of the game is to drive the truck around an empty racetrack. Opponent vehicles do appear in the game, however they have no AI and never leave the starting position, which makes losing virtually impossible. A patch was later released to fix this, but again losing was impossible as the trucks stop near the finish line and never make it across.

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing Big Rigs Over the Road Racing Angry Video Game Nerd Episode 118

The player may freely drive on and off roads without any loss of traction, up or down 90° slopes with no loss or gain of lateral speed, through structures such as buildings, trees, bridges, checkpoints, and enemy vehicles (due to a lack of collision detection), and out of the boundaries of the map into an endless grey void. If the player presses and holds the reverse key, the vehicle can accelerate until reaching 1.23×1037 mph (1.98×1037 km/h; 5.8×1020 ly/s) or over 1028 times the speed of light, at which point all checkpoints will turn green and the player will instantly win the race. However, the truck will halt instantly when the reverse key is released, regardless of its speed.

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing BIG RIGS Over The Road Racing The worst game ever made YouTube

To complete the race, the player must pass through all the course's checkpoints (which can be done in any order) and then cross the finish line. Upon completion of a race, the game displays a large three-handled trophy and the text "YOU'RE WINNER !" [sic]. The game occasionally fails to distinguish between whether the player is starting or finishing the race when they pass through the starting/finishing line, and so this congratulatory screen may appear within seconds of starting a game, thus ending the race prematurely on the first pass.

Four cosmetically different trucks are playable; they all perform identically. Though there are five courses from which to choose, only four are playable. The fifth does not function and selecting it simply crashes the game.

Stellar Stone released a patch that addressed some of the game's complaints. With the patch, the opponent vehicles participate in the race, but stop before they reach the finish line, making the game still impossible to lose. "Nightride", the non-functional track, was replaced with a mirror image of the first track, "Devil Passage 1". Some versions of the patch replaced the "YOU'RE WINNER !" text with "YOU WIN !". The patch also added sound effects, a feature that was missing from the original game, and later copies shipped with the patch by default. However, no effort was made to alter the physics of the game, and other common complaints were not addressed.

Development

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing was developed in Ukraine by California-based company Stellar Stone. The game was developed offshore so the company could produce the game at a relatively cheap price of about US$15,000, compared to costs three to five times higher in price with other European or United States-based developers.

Big Rigs was built on the Eternity proprietary engine, developed by Sergey Titov of TS Group Entertainment, who licensed it to Stellar Stone in exchange for a "large chunk of the company." According to an interview with Titov on yourewinner.com, a Big Rigs fansite, the company "want[ed] to do things cheap and [was] not willing to pay even 200-300K" to create an engine of their own. Titov is credited in the game as producer and co-programmer, but in the interview, he claims he "didn't have much design and development input or any power to stop [Big Rigs] from being released."

Big Rigs was originally intended to be released with Midnight Race Club: Supercharged! as a single, combined title. Instead, GameMill Publishing decided to split the project in two early on in production. Both games were released in their pre-alpha stage. The reason for the splitting is unclear, although Titov speculates it was to increase sales.

Reception

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing was critically panned and is considered to be one of the worst video games of all time. The game holds an aggregated Metacritic score of 8/100, based on 5 reviews, making it Metacritic's all-time worst video game.

It was featured on the X-Play "Games You Should Never Buy" segment where series co-host Morgan Webb described Big Rigs as "the worst game ever made" and refused to even rate it as their X/5 rating system does not have a zero score.

Alex Navarro of GameSpot called the game "broken", "terrible", "worst of the worst", and "atrocious", declaring that Big Rigs is "as bad as your mind will allow you to comprehend" and imploring of viewers, "Please do not play this game. We cannot stress this enough." Considering the game to be "blatantly unfinished in nearly every way", Navarro's video review consisted solely of footage from the game interspersed with scenes showing him staring in disbelief, crying, beating his head on a desk and finally exiting the building and lying down in the middle of an alley in disgust. In the Halloween video Frightfully Bad Games, Navarro stated "This game received the lowest score in the history of GameSpot, a 1.0 (Abysmal). And by lowest, I mean it can't go any lower. We don't hand out zeros, but maybe we should have for Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing." For the next nine years, Big Rigs remained the only game to have scored a 1.0 on GameSpot, until this score was shared with Ride to Hell: Retribution in 2013. Navarro later revisited the game in 2015, performing a speedrun of it for the annual Awesome Games Done Quick charity event.

In GameSpot's "Best and Worst of 2004" awards, Big Rigs was given the "Flat-Out Worst Game" award, despite the fact that the game was actually released in 2003. They said that they would use the "YOU'RE WINNER !" trophy as a symbol for the 'Flat-Out Worst Game' award from then on, but by 2005, a more generic logo was used. Actual sales figures for the game are unknown, although GameSpot has stated that "perhaps most disgusting of all is that this game actually sold copies. More copies, in fact, than more than half of our finalists in the 'Best Game No One Played' category, the criteria for which is selling fewer than 20,000 copies of the game."

Big Rigs was also featured on an episode of the Angry Video Game Nerd web-show in 2014. James Rolfe, who plays the Nerd persona, called it "one of the worst, if not the worst, game of all time" in the episode, adding that it was "not even close to what you'd call a finished game."

References

Big Rigs: Over the Road Racing Wikipedia