Harman Patil (Editor)

Power Drift

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Director(s)
  
Composer(s)
  
Arcade system
  
Sega Y Board

Designer
  
Developers
  
Producer(s)
  
Yu Suzuki

Mode(s)
  
Single player

Initial release date
  
1988

Genre
  
Kart racing game

Power Drift Sega Ages Power Drift J ISO lt Saturn ISOs Emuparadise

Display
  
Raster 320 x 224 pixels (Horizontal),24,576 out of 2,097,152 colors

Platforms
  
Publishers
  
Sega, Activision, Asmik Ace, Activision Blizzard, The Hit Squad

Similar
  
Yu Suzuki games, Racing video games

Power drift arcade game play hd


Power Drift (パワードリフト, Pawā Dorifuto) is a kart racing arcade game released by Sega in 1988. This racing game made much use of sprite-scaling to create a 3D effect, similar to contemporaries Out Run and Hang-On.

Contents

Gameplay

The object is to finish each race in third place or better in order to advance to the next stage. Players have the option of continuing if they finish the race in fourth place or lower before the game is over. However, the player's score will not increase upon continuing the game.

Courses

The tracks have a roller coaster feel to them, with lots of steep climbs and falls, as well as the ability to "fall" off higher levels. To add to this feeling, the sit-down cabinet was built atop a raised hydraulic platform, and the machine would tilt and shake quite violently. Each circuit, labeled from "A" to "E" has a certain theme to it (for example, circuit A has cities, circuit B has deserts, circuit C has beaches, etc.) in a series of five tracks. There are also four laps for each course. Course A was Springfield Ovalshape, Foofy Hilltop, Snowhill Drive, Octopus Oval and Curry De Parl, Course B was Swingshot City, Phantom Riverbend, Octangular Ovalshape, Charlotte Beach and Highland Spheres, Course C was Bum Beach, Jason Bendyline, Nighthawk City, Zanussi Island and Wasteman Freefall, Course D was Mexico Colours, Oxygen Desert, Jamie Road, Monaco Da Farce and Blow Hairpin, Course E was Aisthorpe Springrose Valley, Patterson Nightcity, Lydia Rightaway, Bungalow Ridgeway and Karen Longway, The two extra stages with Courses A,C and E resemble an jet fighter from After Burner II and Courses B and D resemble a superbike from Super Hang-On.

Music

Each course in the game has a theme song, and they are as follows:

Power Drift Power Drift World Rev A ROM Download for MAME Rom Hustler

Power Drift was later ported to the Amstrad CPC, Commodore 64, MSX, Amiga, Atari ST, MS-DOS and ZX Spectrum by Activision in 1989. The Spectrum version knocked the long-standing Robocop from the top of the sales charts. A PC Engine version was developed by Copya Systems and published exclusively in Japan by Asmik Ace Entertainment on April 13, 1990. Sega later ported it to the Sega Saturn as part of the Sega Ages series of compilations on February 26, 1998, and in Yu Suzuki Game Works Vol. 1 for the Dreamcast on December 1, 2001. Due to the weaker hardware, every port (except the Saturn and Dreamcast ones) lacks the tilting action seen in the original arcade version.

If players place first on all five tracks (which is indicated by all five gold trophies on the number of wins display behind the course letter), an "Extra Stage" is unlocked, where the assigned car is a vehicle from other Sega games. Courses A, C and E allow players to race with the F-14 Tomcat fighter jet from the After Burner series in the Extra Stage, while courses B and D have an option to race the motorcycle from the Hang-On series. Players also can press the start button while in a race to see a rear view.

Oddly enough, the billboards in the game contain an ad for the well-known Coca-Cola soft drink, the now defunct real-life Chicago radio station WLAK 94, a sign showing Popeye holding a mug full of beer with text next to him that reads "SeaFood and Beer", a real estate sign saying "SOLD!" with the name of Australian real estate company Max Christmas, and for Los Angeles furniture store Victory Furniture, using each entity's then current real-life fonts and signage. This might have been an in-joke amongst the designers, or they might have been inspired from seeing Western advertisements in magazines, travels or the like.

References

Power Drift Wikipedia


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