Harman Patil (Editor)

Midnight Club: Street Racing

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8.6/10
IGN

Producer(s)
  
Glen Hernandez

Programmer(s)
  
Santiago Becerra

Engine
  
Angel Game Engine

Series
  
8.4/10
GameSpot


Designer(s)
  
Darren Chisum

Artist(s)
  
Scott Stoabs

Initial release date
  
25 October 2000

Genre
  
Racing video game

Midnight Club: Street Racing Midnight Club Street Racing Game Media Rockstar Universe Your

Director(s)
  
Michael Limber (creative)

Developers
  
Rockstar San Diego, Rebellion Developments

Publishers
  
Rockstar Games, Destination Software Inc., Syscom Entertainment

Similar
  
Midnight Club games, Rockstar games, Racing video games

Midnight club street racing arcade mode head to head race 10


Midnight Club: Street Racing is a racing arcade game, developed by Angel Studios (now Rockstar San Diego) and published by Rockstar Games. The game focuses on competitive street racing and the import scene, later popularised by The Fast and the Furious movies. The game is available for the PlayStation 2 and Game Boy Advance platforms, the former being a launch title for the platform. It is the first game in Midnight Club franchise, followed by Midnight Club II.

Contents

Midnight Club: Street Racing Midnight Club Street Racing Rockstar Universe Your Universe For

Midnight club street racing 100 completion


Plot

Midnight Club: Street Racing httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb1

A mysterious group of urban street racers known as the Midnight Club race for pride, power, and glory in sleekly customized, enhanced sports cars. As a regular New York City cab driver, the player learns about this secret club and decides to join.

Midnight Club: Street Racing Midnight Club Street Racing 100 Completion YouTube

The player begins with a relatively unmodified and slow vehicle, that being the Taxi. Through a series of races, each with different goals, they defeat other racers and win faster and more expensive vehicles. The goal is to defeat the world champion, who is revealed to be a young Japanese woman named Anika whose father manufactures concept cars in Japan. Being the only person to beat her in a race, the player is the only one who sees her identity and become the World Champion of the Midnight Club, along with winning her concept car. Anika returns to Japan afterwards.

Cities

Midnight Club: Street Racing Midnight Club Street Racing Full Soundtrack YouTube

Players race through the cities of London and New York. At the time of release, the game's cities were considered highly detailed and large. Along with Turbo Esprit, the game pioneered the use of an open world environment design instead of predefined circuit tracks. Both cities are designed for the street racing scenario.

Each city contains landmarks from their respective real life counterparts. Some of London's visible landmarks include Trafalgar Square, the Palace of Westminster and its Big Ben, and the Tower Bridge. New York includes such landmarks as Times Square, the Empire State Building, the World Trade Center, Rockefeller Center, United Nations Plaza, Plaza Hotel, Madison Square Garden, Washington Square Park, the Wall Street Bull, Battery Park and Central Park.

Multiplayer

Multiplayer modes, such as Capture the Flag, are available for play on the PlayStation 2 by using additional controllers.

Reception

The game was met with mixed to positive reception. GameRankings and Metacritic gave it a score of 76.99% and 78 out of 100 for the PlayStation 2 version, and 48.43% and 50 out of 100 for the Game Boy Advance version.

For the PS2 version, IGN, rating it an 8.6/10, stated, "In addition to the litany of cars, the huge cities are riddled with secrets and original ways to make shortcuts, which makes single player gameplay and two-player games extremely fun." GameSpot, giving it an 8.4/10 rating, called it "an extremely fun arcade-style racer". Game Revolution, however, grading it a B-, stated, "While offering a decent helping of fun, the bland textures and ubiquitous gameplay make for a somewhat unexciting PS2 start."

For the GBA version, Nintendo Power, rating it a 2.9/5, called it "a decent if not repetitive drive". Game Over Online, rating it 56%, stated, "There is no solid gameplay to back up what is, at the onset, a graphically engaging 2D engine, complete with special effects." Play Magazine, giving it two stars out of five, stated, "Unless you stay within the given path, you're guaranteed to lose every race."

The game has sold 1.976 million copies worldwide.

References

Midnight Club: Street Racing Wikipedia


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